Ecology, Population Dynamics, and Human Impact: Key Concepts for BIO 105

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42 Terms

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Biosphere

All ecosystems on Earth; the global sum of all living organisms and environments.

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Biotic

Living components of an ecosystem (plants, animals, microbes).

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Abiotic

Nonliving components (temperature, water, soil, sunlight).

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Ecosystem

A community of organisms interacting with each other and the abiotic environment.

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Climate

Long-term patterns of temperature, precipitation, and humidity in an area.

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Weather

Short-term conditions of the atmosphere.

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Global warming

The increase in Earth's average surface temperature due to rising greenhouse gases.

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Climate change

Long-term changes in climate patterns (temperature, precipitation, storms).

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Greenhouse gases

Gases that trap heat in the atmosphere (CO₂, methane, nitrous oxide).

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Atmospheric carbon dioxide

CO₂ in the air; increased by human activity.

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Carbon sink

A reservoir that absorbs more carbon than it releases (forests, oceans).

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Carbon source

A process or system that releases more carbon than it absorbs (burning fossil fuels).

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Solar radiation

Energy from the sun.

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Infrared radiation

Heat energy re-radiated from Earth's surface.

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Immigration

Individuals entering a population.

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Emigration

Individuals leaving a population.

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Population size

Number of individuals in a population.

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Population density

Number of individuals per unit area.

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Exponential growth

Population grows at a constant rate; produces a J-shaped curve.

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Logistic growth

Growth slows as carrying capacity is reached; produces an S-shaped curve.

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Carrying capacity (K)

Maximum population size an environment can support long-term.

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Cyclical fluctuation

Population naturally rises and falls over time.

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Ecological community

All interacting species in a particular area.

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Relative species abundance

How common each species is relative to others.

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Species richness

Number of different species in a community.

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Food chain

A linear sequence of who eats whom.

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Food web

Complex network of feeding relationships.

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Keystone species

Species with a disproportionately large effect on its community.

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Producer

Organisms that make their own food (plants, algae).

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Consumer

Organisms that eat others (herbivores, carnivores, omnivores).

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Mutualism

Both species benefit (+/+).

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Competition

Species compete for resources (-/-).

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Commensalism

One benefits, the other unaffected (+/0).

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Predation

Predator kills and consumes prey.

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Parasite

Lives on/in a host and harms it.

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Host

The organism a parasite lives on/in.

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Succession

Gradual change in an ecological community over time.

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Primary succession

Begins on surfaces with no soil (lava rock, glacier retreat).

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Secondary succession

Begins where soil already exists (after fire, farming).

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Mimicry

One species evolves to resemble another.

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Climax community

Stable, mature community resulting from succession.

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Ecological footprint

Amount of land/water required to support an individual's lifestyle; measured in global hectares (gha).