Environmental Science Chapters 1 - 5

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546 Terms

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Ecosystem

A community of living (biotic) organisms interacting with the non-living (abiotic) components of their environment as a system through various nutrients and energy cycles.

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Organism

A living thing that can function on its own.

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Species

Organisms that resemble each other; are similar in genetic makeup, chemistry, and behavior; and are able to interbreed and produce fertile offspring.

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Interspecific

Means between different species.

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Population

Organisms of the same species that interact with each other and occupy a specific area.

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Community

Population of different species.

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Ecological Niche

A particular area within a habitat occupied by an organism, as well as the function of that organism within its ecological community.

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Physical environment

It influences how organisms affect and is affected by resources and competitors.

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Niche

It reflects the specific adaptations that a species has acquired through evolution.

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Generalists

Able to survive on a wide variety of food resources

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Generalists

Able to withstand a wide range of environmental conditions

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Generalists

Live in broad niches

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Specialists

Specific/limited number of prey

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Specialists

Prone to extinction, sensitive to environmental change

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Specialists

Live in narrow niches

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Symbiosis

A term used to describe any type of close and long-term biological interaction between two different biological organisms of the same or different species.

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Amensalism

The interaction between two species whereby one species suffers and the other species is not affected.

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Commensalism

The interaction between two species whereby one organism benefits and the other species is not affected.

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Competition

It can be either intraspecific and interspecific. It is the driving force of evolution whether it is for food, mating partners, or territory.

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Intraspecific

Competition between members of the same species.

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Interspecific

Competition between members of different species.

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predator–prey relationships

Competition is prominent in , with the predator seeking food and the prey seeking survival.

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Mutualism

The interaction between two species whereby both species benefit.

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Parasitism

The interaction between two species whereby one species is benefited, and the other species is harmed.

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Opportunistic predators

These predators kill and eat almost anything.

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Specialist predators

These predators only prey upon certain organisms.

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Saprottrophism

Saprotrophs obtain their nutrients from dead or decaying plants or animals through the absorption of soluble organic compounds.

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Law of Tolerance

It states that the existence, abundance, and distribution of species depend on the tolerance level of each species to both physical and chemical factors.

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Limiting Factor

Any abiotic factor that limits or prevents the growth of a population.

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Predator-prey cycles

These are based on a feeding relationship between two species:

  • If the prey species rapidly multiply, the number of predators increases until the predators eventually eat so many of the prey that the prey population dwindles again.
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Morphological partitioning

It occurs when two species share the same resource but have evolved slightly different structures to utilize the same resource

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Spatial partitioning

It occurs when competing species use the same resource by occupying different areas or habitats within the range of occurrence of the resource

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Temporal partitioning

It occurs when two species eliminate direct competition by utilizing the same resource at different times

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Biomes

These are major regional or global biotic communities characterized by dominant forms of plant life and the prevailing climates

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average air temperature

amount of rainfall

The geographical distribution of the various terrestrial biomes is controlled primarily by the and the _ the biome receives.

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Deserts

Defined in terms of the amount of rainfall they receive, not temperature.

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Deserts

They cover about 20% of Earth’s surface and occur where rainfall is less than 20 inches (50 cm) per year.

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Arctic tundra

It is a cold desert due to the low amount of rainfall it receives yearly.

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Succulents

Plants that have fleshy leaves or stems that store water.

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Cactus

  • They have sharp spines that create shade, reduce drying airflow, discourage herbivores and reflect sunlight.
  • They also secrete toxins into the soil to prevent interspecific completion.
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Wildflowers

  • They are dependent on water for germination;
  • They have short life spans;
  • They perform their entire life cycle from seed to flower to seed within a single growing season
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Desert animals

  • They are generally small.
  • They are often nocturnal.
  • They have small surface areas.
  • They spend time in underground burrows where it is cold.
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Aestivation

A summer hibernation.

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Forests

It cover about one-third of Earth's land surface, mostly in North America, the Russian Federation, and South America, and account for 75% of gross primary productivity and plant biomass.

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Ecozones

_ like boreal forests near the poles and tropical forests near the equator are formed by forests at different latitudes and elevations.

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Closed canopy

Tree crowns cover more than 20% of the ground’s surface.

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Open canopy

Tree crowns cover less than 20% of the ground surface.

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Tropical Rainforests

  • Animals include numerous birds, bats, small mammals, and insects.
  • Decomposition is rapid and soils are subject to heavy leaching.
  • Distinct seasonality where winter is absent and only two seasons are present.
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Tropical Rainforests

  • The length of daylight is 12 hours and varies a little year-round
  • Large diversity of species.
  • Occur near the equator.
  • Annual rainfall exceeds 80 inches (200 cm) and is evenly distributed.
  • Plants are highly diverse.
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Tropical Rainforests

  • Tree canopy is multilayered and continuous, allowing little light penetration.
  • Trees have buttressed trunks, shallow roots, and large, dark green leaves.
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Overstory

The uppermost trees in a forest.

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Understory

Layer made up of young trees, short species of trees, shrubs, and soft-stemmed plants.

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Temperate Deciduous Forests

  • Occur in eastern North America, northeastern Asia, and western and central Europe.
  • Have a distinct winter, moderate climate, and a 140–200-day growing season during four to six frost-free months.
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Temperate Deciduous Forests

  • Temperature varies from –20°F to 85°F (–30°C to 30°C).
  • Precipitation averages 30–60 inches (75–150 cm) per year.
  • Fertile soil is enriched by decaying leaf litter.
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Temperate Deciduous Forests

The tree canopy allows light to penetrate, resulting in well-developed and diverse understory vegetation and animal stratification.

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Temperate Coniferous Forest

  • Found in temperate regions with warm summers, cool winters, and enough rainfall to support forests.
  • Common in coastal areas with mild winters and heavy rainfall, or inland in drier climates or mountains.
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Temperate Coniferous Forest

  • These forests have cedar, cypress, fir, juniper, pine, redwood, and spruce.
  • These forests have two layers:
    • Overstory
    • Understory
  • Some forests have a shrub layer.
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Temperate Coniferous Forest

  • In winter, when food is scarce, many animals hibernate to conserve energy and build fat in summer.
  • Birds have feathers and many animals have thick fur to protect them from cold weather.
  • Some animals migrate to warmer climates during the winter months.
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Taiga

Largest terrestrial biome; found in northern Eurasia, North America, Scandinavia, and two-thirds of Siberia.

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Southern Taiga

Also known as boreal forest, consists primarily of cold-tolerant evergreen conifers with needle-like leaves, such as pines, spruces, and larches.

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Northern Taiga

It is more barren as it approaches the tree line and the tundra biome.

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Grasslands

These are characterized as lands dominated by grasses rather than by large shrubs or trees.

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Savannas

These are grasslands with scattered individual trees and cover almost half the surface of Africa and large areas of Australia, South America, and India.

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Temperate Grasslands

Here grasses are the dominant vegetation, while trees and large shrubs are absent.

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Tundra

It has extremely low temperatures, large repetitive population changes, limited soil nutrients, little precipitation, low biotic diversity, poor drainage, short growing and reproductive seasons, and simple vegetation structure.

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Arctic tundra

Due to the ’s unique conditions, the biota is highly specialized and sensitive to environmental change.

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Arctic tundra

It circles the North Pole and extends south to the taiga, is cold, dry, and desert-like.

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Permafrost

A layer of permanently frozen subsoil.

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Alpine tundra

It is located on mountains throughout the world at high altitudes where trees cannot grow.

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Aquatic Biomes

Antarctic, marine, lakes, wetlands, and rivers

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Antarctica

It has the coldest climate on Earth.

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ice sheet

It is formed from compressed snow that rarely melts.

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Krill

These are key food sources in this ecosystem and serve as food for many predators.

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75%

Oceans cover approximately ____ of Earth’s surface and have a salt concentration of about 3%.

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Evaporation

of seawater is the primary source of most of the world’s rainfall.

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Convection

The circular motion that occurs when warmer air or liquid rises, while the cooler air or liquid sinks.

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conveyor belt

Thermohaline currents drive a "_" of ocean water that moves constantly, unlike most surface currents, which are driven by winds.

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Littoral Zone

Also known as the intertidal zone, it is the part of the ocean that is closest to the shore.

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Neretic Zone

Also known as the sublittoral zone, this zone extends to the edge of the continental shelf.

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Photic Zone

The uppermost layer of water in a lake or ocean that is exposed to sunlight down to the depth where 1% of surface sunlight is available.

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Photic Zone

The layer just above the depth where the rate of carbon dioxide uptake by plants is equal to the rate of carbon dioxide production by animals.

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Corals

These are marine invertebrates that typically live in compact colonies of many identical individual polyps.

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Polyps

Small, sac-like animals with a set of tentacles surrounding a central mouth opening and an exoskeleton made of calcium carbonate at the base.

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zooxanthellae

Most corals obtain the majority of their energy and nutrients from photosynthetic unicellular dinoflagellates, commonly known as _, that live within their tissues.

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Fringing reefs

  • They grow near the coastline around islands and continents and are separated from the shore by narrow, shallow lagoons.
  • They are the most common type of reef.
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Barrier reefs

  • These are also parallel to the coastline but are separated by deeper, wider lagoons.
  • At their shallowest point, they can reach the water’s surface, forming a “barrier” to navigation.
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Atolls

  • These are rings of coral that create protected lagoons and are usually located in the middle of the sea.
  • They usually form when islands, often the tops of underwater volcanoes, surrounded by fringing reefs, sink into the sea, or the sea level rises around them.
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Lakes

These are large natural bodies of standing freshwater formed when precipitation, runoff, or groundwater seepage fills depressions in Earth’s surface.

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Artificial lakes

These are constructed for hydroelectric power generation, recreational purposes, industrial and agricultural use, and/or domestic water supply.

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Benthic Zone

The bottom of lake, organisms can tolerate cool temperatures and low oxygen levels.

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Limnetic Zone

A well-lit, open surface water, farther from shore, extends to a depth penetrated by light, occupied by phytoplankton, zooplankton, and higher animals; produces food and oxygen that supports most of a lake’s consumers

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Littoral Zone

It is shallow, close to shore, extends to depth penetrated by light; rooted and floating plants flourish

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Profundal Zone

It is deep, no-light regions, too dark for photosynthesis; low oxygen levels; inhabited by fish adapted to cool, dark waters

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Oligotrophic (Young Lake)

Deep, cold, small surface area relative to depth; nutrient-poor, phytoplankton are sparse; not very productive; doesn’t contain much life; waters often very clear; and sediments are low in decomposable organic matter.

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Mesotrophic (Middle-Aged Lake)

Moderate nutrient content and moderate amounts of phytoplankton; reasonably productive.

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Eutrophic (Old Lake)

Shallow, warm, large surface area relative to depth; Waters often murky;

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stratification

The or layering of water in lakes is the result of density changes caused by shifts in temperature.

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hypolimnion

Deep water is insulated from the sun and stays cool and denser, forming a lower layer called the _.

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Seasonal turnover

_ refers to the exchange of surface and bottom water in a lake or pond that happens twice a year.

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Fall Turnover

  • With the arrival of fall and cooler air temperatures, water at the surface of a lake begins to cool and becomes heavier.
  • During this time, strong fall winds move the surface water around, which promotes mixing with deeper water.