AICE Marine Science Chapter 3 Vocab (New Coursebook)

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60 Terms

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Chlorophyll

A pigment found in plants and algae that is used to absorb sunlight for photosynthesis

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Photosynthesis

The process of using light energy to synthesize glucose from carbon dioxide and water to produce chemical energy

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Carbohydrate

Organic compounds occurring in living tissues that contain carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen (for example, starch, cellulose, and sugars); they can be broken down in the process of respiration to release energy

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Consumer

An animal which feeds on other organisms to gain energy from food

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Algal Bloom

A rapid increase in a population of algae

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Community

All the different populations interacting in one habitat at the same time

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Mutualism

A relationship between two different organisms where both organisms benefit

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Predation

A relationship between two organisms where a predator hunts, kills, and eats a prey animal

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Parasitism

A relationship between two organisms where the parasite obtains benefit at the expense of the host

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Competition

A relationship between two organisms where both species are negatively affected as they are trying to use the same resource

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Symbiosis

A relationship between two or more organisms of different species which live physically close to each other

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Commensalism

A relationship between two organisms where one organism benefits and the other is neither harmed nor benefitted

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Ectoparasite

A parasite which lives on the outside of its host, such as a flea or a louse

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Endoparasite

A parasite which lives inside the body of its host, such as a tapeworm

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Phoresis

A commensal relationship where one organism attaches itself to another in order to travel

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Autotroph

An organism that can capture the energy in light or chemicals and use it to produce carbohydrates from simple molecules such as carbon dioxide

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Chemosynthesis

The production of organic compounds by bacteria or other living organisms using the energy derived from reactions with inorganic chemicals

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Heterotroph

An organism that cannot make its own food and instead relies on consuming other organisms; all animals, fungi, and protozoans are examples, as well as most bacteria

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Primary Productivity

The rate of production of new biomass through photosynthesis or chemosynthesis

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Food Chain

A way to describe the feeding relationships between organisms; shows only one path of energy through an ecosystem

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Herbivore

An animal which feeds only on producers (plants or phytoplankton)

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Carnivore

An animal which feeds on other animals

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Predator

An animal which hunts, kills, and eats other animals

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Prey

An animal which is eaten by predators

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Omnivore

An animal which feeds both on other animals and on producers

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Decomposers

Bacteria and fungi which break down dead organic matter and release the nutrients back into the environment

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Food Web

A way to show all the different feeding relationships in an ecosystem

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Biomass

The mass of living material in an area; it can be measured as dry mass (without water) or wet mass (with water)

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Trophic Level

The position an organism occupies in the food chain or food web

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Apex Predator

An organism at the end of the food chain which has no natural predators

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Photoautotroph

An organism which is able to use light energy to synthesize organic compounds

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Photic zone

The surface layer of the ocean which receives sunlight (top 200m)

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Chemoautotroph

An organism which is able to use chemical energy to synthesize organic compounds

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Extremophile

An organism that is adapted to survive extreme temperature, pressure, salinity, or pH

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Respiration

The process by which all living things release energy from their food by oxidizing glucose

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Compensation Point

The light intensity at which the rate of photosynthesis and the rate of respiration are equal

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Eutrophication

The process by which a body of water becomes enriched in dissolved nutrients (such as nitrates and phosphates) that stimulate the growth of producers, usually resulting in the depletion of dissolved oxygen in the water

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Pyramid of Numbers

A diagram that shows the number of organisms in each trophic level of a food chain

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Pyramid of Biomass

A diagram that shows the biomass present in each trophic level of a food chain

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Pyramid of Energy

A diagram that shows the amount of energy in each trophic level of a food chain

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Nutrient Cycles

The movement and exchange of elements that are essential to life, from inorganic molecules, through fixation and then into living organisms, before being decomposed back into inorganic molecules

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Nutrient

A chemical that provides what is needed for organisms to grow, repair damaged cells or tissues, release energy, or for their metabolism

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Assimilation

The conversion of a nutrient into a useable form that can be incorporated into the tissues of an organism

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Primary Producers

Organisms that produce biomass from inorganic compounds; in almost all cases these are photosynthetically active organisms

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Polymer

A large molecule made from many repeating sub-units

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Monomer

The smallest unit of a polymer; joined together chemically to form longer molecules

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Starch

A carbohydrate made from chains of glucose molecules joined together

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Cellulose

An important component of plant cell walls which is made from many straight chains of glucose molecules held together by hydrogen bonds

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Triglyceride

A type of lipid which is made from a glycerol molecule joined to three fatty acid chains

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Fatty Acid

Lipid molecules that are a major constituent of triglycerides and phospholipids

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Hydrophobic

A molecule without a charge which repels water molecules

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Residence Time

The average time that a particle spends in a particular system

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Excretion

The process of eliminating the waste formed from the chemical reactions within living cells

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Sink

An area where there is a net loss of material (for example, where more gas dissolves into the ocean than diffuses into the atmosphere)

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Source

An area where there is a net gain of material (for example, where more gas diffuses into the atmosphere than dissolves in the ocean)

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Marine Snow

Particles of organic material that fall from surface layers into the deeper ocean

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Carbonic Acid

A weak acid made of carbon dioxide dissolved in water

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Sedimentary Rock

Rock formed by the deposition of particles on the ocean floor

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Marine Uplift

A process by which the floor of the ocean rises, possibly to the extent that it is no longer beneath the water

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Fossil Fuels

Buried organic materials from dead plants and animals which have been converted into oil, coal, or natural gas by exposure to heat and pressure in the Earth's crust