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Abiotic
Nonliving.
Biotic
Living.
Ecosystem
A particular location on Earth with interacting biotic and abiotic components.
Environment
The sum of all the conditions surrounding us that influence life.
Aerobic
An environment with abundant oxygen.
Aerobic respiration
The process by which cells convert glucose and oxygen into energy, carbon dioxide, and water.
Algal bloom
A rapid increase in the algal population of a waterway.
Anaerobic
An environment that lacks oxygen.
Anaerobic respiration
The process by which cells convert glucose into energy in the absence of oxygen.
Aphotic zone
The deeper layer of ocean water that lacks sufficient sunlight for photosynthesis.
Aquatic biome
An aquatic region characterized by a particular combination of salinity, depth, and water flow.
Assimilation
A process by which plants and algae incorporate nitrogen into their tissues.
Benthic zone
The muddy bottom of a lake, pond, or ocean beneath the limnetic and profundal zones.
Biogeochemical cycle
The movements of matter within and between ecosystems involving cycles of biological, geological, and chemical processes.
Biomass
Biological material that has mass.
Biome
The plants and animals that are found in a particular region of the world.
Biosphere
The region of our planet where life resides.
Carbon cycle
The movement of carbon around the biosphere among reservoir sources and sinks.
Carnivore
A consumer that eats other consumers.
Cellular respiration
The process by which cells unlock the energy of chemical compounds.
Chemosynthesis
A process used by some bacteria to generate energy with methane and hydrogen sulfide.
Climate
The average weather that occurs in a given region over a long period of time.
Commensalism
An interaction between two species in which one species benefits and the other species is neither harmed nor helped.
Community ecology
The study of interactions among species.
Competition
The struggle of individuals, either within or between species, to obtain a shared limiting resource.
Competitive exclusion principle
The principle stating that two species competing for the same limiting resource cannot coexist.
Consumer (Heterotroph)
An organism that is incapable of photosynthesis and must therefore obtain its energy by consuming other organisms.
Coral bleaching
A phenomenon in which algae inside corals die, causing the corals to turn white.
Coral reef
Represents Earth’s most diverse marine biome, and are found in warm, shallow waters beyond the shoreline in tropical regions.
Dead zone
When oxygen concentrations become so low that it kills fish and other aquatic animals.
Decomposers
Fungi and bacteria that complete the breakdown process by converting organic matter into small elements and molecules that can be recycled back into the ecosystem.
Denitrification
The conversion of nitrate (NO3) in a series of steps into the gases nitrous oxide (N2O) and, eventually, nitrogen gas (N2O), which is emitted into the atmosphere.
Detritivore
An organism that specializes in breaking down dead tissues and waste products into smaller particles.
Ecological efficiency
The proportion of consumed energy that can be passed from one trophic level to another.
Estuary
An area along the coast where the fresh water of rivers mixes with salt water from the ocean.
Eutrophic
Describes a lake with a high level of fertility.
Evapotranspiration
The combined amount of evaporation and transpiration.
Exotic species (Alien species)
A species living outside its historical range.
Food chain
The sequence of consumption from producers through tertiary consumers.
Food web
A model of how energy and matter move through two or more interconnected food chains.
Freshwater biomes
Categorized as streams and rivers, lakes and ponds, or freshwater wetlands.
Freshwater wetland
An aquatic biome that is submerged or saturated by water for at least part of each year, but shallow enough to support emergent vegetation.
Global warming
The increase in global temperatures due to humans producing more greenhouse gases.
Greenhouse gases
Gases in Earth’s atmosphere that trap heat near the surface.
Gross primary productivity (GPP)
The total amount of solar energy that producers in an ecosystem capture via photosynthesis over a given amount of time.
Habitat
An area where a particular species lives in nature.
Herbivore (Primary consumer)
A consumer that eats producers.
Herbivory
An interaction in which an animal consumes plants or algae.
Hot desert
A biome located at roughly 30° N and 30° S, and characterized by hot temperatures, extremely dry conditions, and sparse vegetation.
Hydrologic cycle
The movement of water around the biosphere among reservoir sources and sinks.
Hypoxic
Low in oxygen.
Intertidal zone
The narrow band of coastline that exists between the levels of high tide and low tide.
Invasive species
A species that spreads rapidly across large areas and causes harm.
Leaching
A process in which dissolved molecules are transported through the soil via groundwater.
Limiting nutrient
A nutrient required for the growth of an organism but available in a lower quantity than other nutrients.
Limnetic zone
A zone of open water in lakes and ponds as deep as the sunlight can penetrate.
Littoral zone
The shallow zone of soil and water in lakes and ponds near the shore where most algae and emergent plants such as cattails grow.
Mangrove swamp
A swamp that occurs along tropical and subtropical coasts, and contains salt-tolerant trees with roots submerged in water.
Mesotrophic
Describes a lake with a moderate level of fertility.
Mineralization (Ammonification)
The process by which fungal and bacterial decomposers break down the organic matter found in dead bodies and waste products and convert it into inorganic compounds, such as inorganic ammonium (NH4+).
Mutualism
An interaction between two species that increases the chances of survival or reproduction for both species.
Native species
A species that lives in its historical range, typically where it has lived for thousands or millions of years.
Net primary productivity (NPP)
The energy captured by producers in an ecosystem minus the energy producers respire.
Nitrification
The conversion of ammonia (NH4+) into nitrite (NO2−) and then into nitrate (NO3−).
Nitrogen cycle
The movement of nitrogen around the biosphere among reservoir sources and sinks.
Nitrogen fixation
The process that converts nitrogen gas in the atmosphere (N2) into forms of nitrogen that plants and algae can use.
Oligotrophic
Describes a lake with a low level of phytoplankton due to low amounts of nutrients in the water.
Open ocean
Deep-ocean water, located away from the shoreline where sunlight can no longer reach the ocean bottom.
Parasitism
An interaction in which one organism lives on or in another organism, referred to as the host.
Parasitoid
A specialized type of predator that lays eggs inside other organisms—referred to as its host.
Pathogen
A parasite that causes disease in its host.
Permafrost
An impermeable, permanently frozen layer of soil.
Phosphorus cycle
The movement of phosphorus around the biosphere among reservoir sources and sinks.
Photic zone
The upper layer of ocean water in the ocean that receives enough sunlight for photosynthesis.
Photosynthesis
The process by which plants and algae use solar energy to convert carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O) into glucose (C6H12O6) and oxygen (O2).
Phytoplankton
Floating algae.
Predation
An interaction in which one animal typically kills and consumes another animal.
Primary productivity
The rate of converting solar energy into organic compounds over a period of time.
Producers (Autotrophs)
Plants, algae, and some bacteria that use the Sun’s energy to produce usable forms of energy, such as sugars.
Profundal zone
A region of water where sunlight does not reach, below the limnetic zone in very deep lakes.
Reservoirs
The components of the biogeochemical cycle that contain matter, including air, water, and organisms.
Resource partitioning
When two species divide a resource based on differences in their behavior or morphology.
Runoff
Water that moves across the land surface and into streams and rivers.
Salt marsh
Found along the coast in temperate climates, a marsh containing nonwoody emergent vegetation.
Savanna (Tropical seasonal forest)
A biome marked by warm temperatures and distinct wet and dry seasons.
Scavenger
An organism that consumes dead animals.
Secondary consumer
A carnivore that eats primary consumers.
Shrubland (Woodland)
A biome characterized by hot, dry summers and mild, rainy winters.
Standing crop
The amount of biomass present in an ecosystem at a particular time.
Steady state
When a system’s inputs equal outputs, so that the system is not changing over time.
Symbiosis
Two species living in close and long-term association with one another in an ecosystem.
Taiga (Boreal forest)
A forest biome made up primarily of coniferous evergreen trees that can tolerate cold winters and short growing seasons.
Temperate grassland (Cold desert)
A biome characterized by cold, harsh winters, and hot, dry summers.
Temperate rainforest
A coastal biome typified by moderate temperatures and high precipitation.
Temperate seasonal forest
A biome with warm summers and cold winters with over 1 m (39 inches) of annual precipitation.
Terrestrial biome
A geographic region of land categorized by a particular combination of average annual temperature, annual precipitation, and distinctive plant growth forms.
Tertiary consumer
A carnivore that eats secondary consumers.
The 10% rule
Of the total biomass available at a given trophic level, only about 10 percent can be converted into energy at the next highest trophic level.
Transpiration
The release of water from leaves into the atmosphere during photosynthesis.
Trophic levels
The successive levels of organisms consuming one another.