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Biodiversity
Habitat
the natural home or environment of an animal, plant, or other organism.
Specialist species
Species with a narrow ecological niche. They may be able to live in only one type of habitat, tolerate only a narrow range of climatic and other environmental conditions, or use only one type or a few types of food.
Ecosystem
A biological community of interacting organisms and their physical environment.
Species richness
the number of different species in a community
Species evenness
the relative proportion of different species in a given area
Biodiversity hotspot
is a biogeographic region with a significant reservoir of biodiversity that is under threat from humans
Ecosystem services
The process by which natural environments provide life-supporting resources
Provisioning
products obtained from ecosystems
Regulating
benefits obtained from the regulating of ecosystems (flood prevention, water filtration, erosion control)
Cultural
Non-material benefits obtained from ecosystems, intrinsic value
Supporting
ecosystem services necessary for all other ecosystem services
Anthropogenic
Human-induced changes on the natural environment
Theory of Island Biogeography
demonstrates the dual importance of habitat size and distance in determining species richness
Generalist species
Species with a broad ecological niche. They can live in many different places, eat a variety of foods, and tolerate a wide range of environmental conditions. Examples are flies, cockroaches, mice, rats, and human beings. Compare specialist species.
Invasive species
A species, often introduced by humans, that takes hold outside its native range.
Native species
Species that normally live and thrive in a particular ecosystem
Zebra mussels
are an invasive exotic species that clogs water intake pipes at factories, power plants, and wastewater treatment facilities
Ecological tolerance
the range of conditions in which a species can survive
Salinity
The total amount of dissolved salts in a water sample.
Flow rate
The volume of fluid that moves through a system in a given period of time.
Range of tolerance
Range of chemical and physical conditions that must be maintained for populations of a particular species to stay alive and grow, develop, and function normally
Climate
The average weather conditions in an area over a long period of time
Migration
Movement from one habitat to another
adaptation
inherited characteristic that increases an organism's chance of survival
Genetic diversity
the variety of genes within a given species
Evolution
Change in a kind of organism over time; process by which modern organisms have descended from ancient organisms.
Natural selection
A process in which individuals that have certain inherited traits tend to survive and reproduce at higher rates than other individuals because of those traits.
Speciation
Formation of new species
Bottleneck effect
a reduction in the genetic diversity of a population caused by a reduction in its size
Succession
A series of predictable and orderly changes within an ecosystem over time.
Keystone species
A species that influences the survival of many other species in an ecosystem
Primary succession
An ecological succession that begins in an area where no biotic community previously existed (bare rock)
Secondary succession
Succession following a disturbance that destroys a community without destroying the soil
Opportunistic species
Species that specialize in invading newly vacated habitats
Pioneer species
First species to populate an area during primary succession
Climax Community
stable, mature ecological community with little change in the composition of species
Threatened species
A species that could become endangered in the near future
Endangered species
A species in danger of becoming extinct in the near future
Extinct/extinction
when a species has no members that are still alive; the population of that species no longer exists
Selective pressures
environmental resistance factors affect which individuals survive and reproduce
Fitness
Ability of an organism to survive and reproduce in its environment
Poaching
Illegal hunting of protected animals
Background extinction
normal extinction of various species as a result of changes in local environmental conditions
Mass extinction
event in which many types of living things become extinct at the same time
Endangered Species Act
(1973) identifies threatened and endangered species in the U.S., and puts their protection ahead of economic considerations
CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora)
A 1973 treaty formed to control the international trade of threatened plants and animals
Fauna
all the animal life in a particular region
Flora
plants of a region
Overexploitation
Practice of harvesting or hunting to such a degree that remaining individuals may not be able to replenish the population
Selective breeding
the process of selecting organisms with desired traits to be parents of the next generation
HIPPCO
Habitat destruction, Invasive Species, Population growth, Pollution, Climate Change, Overexploitations
Habitat fragmentation
Splitting of ecosystems into small fragments
Edge effects
different environmental conditions that occur along the boundaries of an ecosystem
Mitigate
to make less severe
Habitat corridors
protected strips of land that allow the migration of organisms from one wilderness area to another
Wildlife refuge
an area of land set aside to protect animals and other living things