ib ecology

0.0(0)
studied byStudied by 0 people
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
Card Sorting

1/57

encourage image

There's no tags or description

Looks like no tags are added yet.

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced

No study sessions yet.

58 Terms

1
New cards

Aerosol

a collection of tiny solid or liquid particles in the atmosphere that can come from natural sources (such as wildfires) or people's activities (such as burning fossil fuels). Some aerosols make the atmosphere warmer because they absorb energy. Others have a cooling effect because they reflect sunlight back into space.

2
New cards

Biofuel

a type of fuel produced from plants or other forms of biomass. Examples of biofuels include ethanol, biodiesel, and biogas.

3
New cards

Biomass

material that comes from living things, including trees, crops, grasses, and animals and animal waste. Some kinds of biomass, such as wood and biofuels, can be burned to produce energy.

4
New cards

Carbon dioxide (CO2)

a colourless, odourless greenhouse gas produced naturally when dead animals or plants decay. It is used by plants during photosynthesis. People are adding carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, mostly by burning fossil fuels.

5
New cards

Climate change

a significant change in the Earth's climate, including changes in weather patterns, the oceans, ice and snow, and ecosystems around the world.

6
New cards

Climate

the average weather conditions in a particular location or region at a particular time of the year. Climate is usually measured over a period of 30 years or more.

7
New cards

Coral reef

a marine ridge or reef consisting of coral and other organic material consolidated into limestone.

8
New cards

Fossil fuel

a type of fuel created over millions of years as dead plant and animal material becomes trapped and buried in layers of rock, and then heat and pressure transform this material into a fuel deep within the Earth. Examples of fossil fuels include coal, oil, and natural gas.

9
New cards

Global warming

the increase in temperature near the surface of the Earth as a result of natural causes. However, the term is most often used to refer to recent and on-going warming caused by people's activities.

10
New cards

Greenhouse gases

natural or man-made gases that trap heat in the atmosphere and contribute to the greenhouse effect. Greenhouse gases include water vapour, carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, and fluorinated gases.

11
New cards

Infrared radiation

a type of electromagnetic radiation. The Earth gives off energy in the form of infrared radiation, which is not visible to the naked eye and feels like heat to the human body.

12
New cards

Long wave radiation (infrared light)

radiation emitted in the spectral wavelength greater than 4 µm corresponding to the radiation emitted from the Earth and atmosphere.

13
New cards

Methane (CH4)

a colourless, odourless greenhouse gas that occurs both naturally and as a result of people's activities. Methane is produced by the decay of plants, animals, and waste, as well as other processes.

14
New cards

Nitrous oxide (NOx)

a colourless, odourless greenhouse gas that occurs both naturally and as a result of people's activities. Major sources include farming practices (such as using fertilizers) that add extra nitrogen to the soil, burning fossil fuels, and certain industrial processes.

15
New cards

Ozone (O3)

a gas made up of three atoms of oxygen bonded together. High in the atmosphere, ozone naturally shields the Earth from harmful ultraviolet radiation and closer to the Earth's surface is a pollutant that is formed by other pollutants that react with each other. Ozone is also a greenhouse gas.

16
New cards

Radiation

energy that travels in the form of a particle or a wave and exists in many different forms, such as electromagnetic radiation, X-rays, ultraviolet radiation, infrared radiation, and visible light.

17
New cards

Ultraviolet (UV) radiation

a type of electromagnetic radiation, not visible to the naked eye that is produced by the sun. Most UV radiation is blocked by ozone high in the Earth's atmosphere, but some of it reaches the Earth's surface and can lead to skin cancer and eye damage.

18
New cards

Water vapour (H2O)

water that is present in the atmosphere as a gas, and as a greenhouse gas it plays an important role in the natural greenhouse effect.

19
New cards

Enhanced Greenhouse effect

Rising global temperatures due to greenhouse gases being put into the atmosphere because of human activities

20
New cards

ocean acidification

decreasing pH of ocean waters due to absorption of excess atmospheric CO2 from the burning of fossil fuels

21
New cards

coral bleaching

A phenomenon in which algae inside corals die, causing the corals to turn white.

22
New cards

Living Plants

Assimilate carbon using photosynthesis

23
New cards

Living Animals

Assimilate carbon by consuming plants

24
New cards

Decomposer organisms

Assimilate carbon by decomposing dead plants and animals

25
New cards

Soils and Organic molecules

Contain carbon in organic molecules from dead organisms which have not been decomposed.

26
New cards

Fossil Fuels

Contain carbon as hydrocarbon molecules from fossilization of organic molecules

27
New cards

Sedimentary Rocks

Contain carbon as carbonate compounds in rocks

28
New cards

Corals and Shellfish

Contain carbon in their shells as carbonates

29
New cards

Phytoplankton

Assimilate carbon using photosynthesis

30
New cards

Oceanic Food webs

Animals in oceans consume phytoplankton and other animals passing carbon through food webs

31
New cards

Sea water

Carbon dissolves and also forms hydrogen carbonates

32
New cards

Photosynthesis

Converts carbon dioxide into glucose and oxygen

33
New cards

Respiration

Converts glucose and oxygen into carbon dioxide and water

34
New cards

Decomposition

Converts organic molecules into carbon dioxide and water

35
New cards

Diffusion

Moves carbon dioxide from the air to the sea, or vice versa

36
New cards

Combustion

Releases carbon dioxide and water from organic molecules

37
New cards

Fossilization

Converts carbonates in coral and molluscs into sedimentary rocks

38
New cards

Feeding

Moves Carbon containing organic compounds from organism to organism

39
New cards

Volcanic eruption

Releases large amounts of carbon dioxide from rocks

40
New cards

Species

Groups of organisms that can potentially interbreed to produce fertile offspring

41
New cards

Population

Groups of organisms of the same species, who live in the same area at the same time

42
New cards

Community

Populations of different species living together and interacting with each other

43
New cards

Autotrophs

Absorb CO2, H2O and inorganic nutrients such as nitrates from abiotic environment.➡️Synthesize carbon compounds they need. Most undergo photosynthesis

44
New cards

Heterotrophs

Can't make carbon compounds. Therefore must be digested and absorbed from diet

45
New cards

Saprotrophs

Common decomposers. Feed on decaying matter. Obtain organic nutrients from dead organisms by external digestion.

46
New cards

Consumers

Feed on living organisms by ingestion

47
New cards

Detritivores

Obtain organic nutrients from detritus (material from living organisms e.g dead leaves or roots, decomposing animals etc) by internal digestion.

48
New cards

Closed system

Allows energy in and out

49
New cards

Mesocosms

Small experimental area set up in an ecological research programme

50
New cards

Quadrat sampling

Classic tool used in ecological research especially for biodiversity.

51
New cards

Abiotic Factors

non-living chemical or physical factors(ex. water, nitrogen, oxygen, salinity, pH, soil nutrients and composition, temperature, amount of sunlight, precipitation) of a system

52
New cards

Biotic Factors

Biological influences on organisms within an ecosystem

53
New cards

Crossbreeding

when members of different species breed together.

54
New cards

Inorganic nutrients

substances neccesary to sustain life that do not contain carbon: such as minerals and water

55
New cards

Ecosystem

A community of interdependent organisms and the physical environment they inhabit.

56
New cards

Interbreeding

breeding that occurs only with its species and that produces fertile offspring.

57
New cards

Sustainable communities

communities that are capable of being maintained at a steady level without exhausting natural resources or causing severe ecological damage.

58
New cards

Chi Square Test for Association

A statistical method of testing for an association between two categorical variables. Specifically, it tests for the equality of two frequencies or proportions.