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AP Biology Ecology Flashcards

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6542553222Populationa localized group of individuals of the same species that can interbreed, producing fertile offspring0
6542553223Communityall the organisms that inhabit a particular area; as assemblage of populations of different species living close enough together for potential interaction1
6542553224Ecosystemall the organisms in a given area as well as the abiotic factors with which they interact2
6542553225Bioticpertaining to the living organisms in the environment3
6542553226Abioticnonliving; referring to physical and chemical properties of an environment4
6542553227Biospherethe entire portion of earth inhabited by life; the sum of all the planet's ecosystems5
6542553228Nichethe sum of a species' use of the biotic and abiotic resources in its environment6
6542553229Clumped Distributionindividual aggregated patches, some organisms group together where food is abundant7
6542553230Uniform Distributionevenly spaced, some organisms maintain evenly distributed spacing to avoid aggressive interactions between neighbors8
6542553231Random Distributionunpredictable spacing, some plants grow in random groups if their seeds were windblown across an area9
6542553232Population Ecologythe study of populations in relation to their environment, including environmental influences on populations, on population density and distribution, age structure, and variations in population size10
6542553239Carrying Capacitythe maximum population size that can be supported by the available resources, (symbolized by K)11
6542553240Density Dependentany characteristic that varies according to an increase in population density12
6542553241Exponential Growthgrowth of a population in an ideal, unlimited environment, (represented by a J-Shaped curve when population size is plotted over time)13
6542553242Logistical Growthpopulation growth that levels off as population size approaches carrying capacity14
6542553243K-Selectedstabilize around carrying capacity, have fewer offspring later in life, mature later, live longer and invest more parental care15
6542553244R-Selectedreside in unstable environment, have many offspring early in life, mature earlier, shorter life span, no parental care16
6542553245Survivorship Curvethe plot of the proportion or numbers in a cohort still alive at each age17
6542553246Type I Surivorship Curvelow death rates during early/middle life then increase among older age groups (humans)18
6542553247Type II Surviorship Curveconstant death rate over the organism's life span19
6542553248Type III Surviorship Curvevery high death rates for the young and then declines for those few individuals that survive the early period (insects)20
6542553249Symbiosisan ecological relationship between organisms of two different species that live together in direct and intimate contact21
6542553250Commensalisma symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits but the other is neither helped nor harmed22
6542553251Mutualisma symbiotic relationship in which both participants benefit23
6542553252Parasitisma symbiotic relationship in which one organism (the parasite) benefits at the expense of another (the host) by living either within or on its host24
6542553253Intraspecific Competitioninteractions between the same species competing for resources25
6542553254Interspecific Competitioncompetition for resources between individuals of two or more species when resources are in short supply26
6542553255Predationan interaction between species in which one species (the predator) eats the other (the prey)27
6542553256Aposematic Colorationthe bright coloration of animals with effective physical or chemical defenses that acts as a warning to predators28
6542553257Batesian Mimicrya type of mimicry in which a harmless species look like a species that is poisonous or harmful to predators29
6542553258Cryptic Colorationcamouflage that makes a potential prey difficult to spot against its background30
6542553259Mullerian Mimicrya mutual mimicry by two unpalatable species31
6542553260Pioneer Speciesthe first species to colonize previously disrupted or damaged ecosystems, beginning a chain of ecological succession that ultimately leads to a more biodiverse steady-state ecosystem32
6542553261Climax Communityin a community of organisms in a specific area there is one state of equilibrium controlled solely by climate33
6542553262Successionthe process by which the structure of a biological community evolves over time34
6542553263Primary Successiona type of ecological succession that occurs in an area where there were originally no organisms present and where soil has not yet formed35
6542553264Secondary Successiona type of succession that occurs where an existing community has been cleared by some disturbance that leaves the soil or substance intact36
6542553265Photoautotrophsan organism that harnesses light energy to drive the synthesis of organic compounds from Carbon Dioxide (CO2)37
6542553266Chemoautotrophsan organism that needs only CO2 as a carbon source but obtains energy by oxidizing inorganic substances38
6542553267Herbivorean animal that eats mainly plants or algae39
6542553268Carnivorean animal that mainly eats other animals40
6542553269Detritivorea consumer that derives its energy and nutrients from nonliving organic material such as corpses, fallen plant material, and the wastes of living organism (a decomposer)41
6542553270Food Chainthe pathway along which food energy is transferred from trophic level to trophic level, beginning with producers42
6542553271Food Webthe interconnected feeding relationships in an ecosystem43
6542553272Trophic Levelsthe positions organisms occupy in a food chain44
6542553273Secondary Consumera carnivore that eats herbivores45
6542553274Primary Consumera herbivore; an organism that eats plants or other autotrophs46
6542553275Biogeochemical Cyclesany of the various chemical cycles, which involve both biotic and abiotic components of ecosystems47
6542553276Carbon Cycleforming the framework of organic molecules, photosynthesis & cellular respiration circulate this nutrient48
6542553277Phosphorus Cyclecycling of this nutrient through geologic processes such as erosion and sedimentation49
6542553278Nitrogen Cyclethis nutrient is converted to compounds that can be assimilated by plants then returned in gas form to the atmosphere; all processes rely on bacteria50
6542553279Nitrogen Fixationthe conversion of atmospheric nitrogen to ammonia51
6542553280Denitrificationprocess where bacteria use nitrates in their metabolism instead of oxygen releasing nitrogen gas then into the atmosphere52
6542553281Water Cyclethis nutrient cycle involves evaporation from the earth & transpiration from plants and falls then by precipitation back down to the earth to begin the cycle again53
6542553282Age Structure Diagramsa visual representation of the relative number of individuals of each age in a population54
6542553283Competitive Exclusion Principlethe concept that when populations of two similar species compete for the same limited resources, one population will use the resources more efficiently and have a reproductive advantage that will eventually lead to the elimination of the other population55
6542553284Resource Partitioningthe division of environmental resources by coexisting species such that the niche of each species differs by one or more significant factors from the niches of all the coexisting species56
6542553285Zero Population Growth (ZPG)a period of stability in population size, when the per capita birth rate and death rate are equal57
6542553286Gross Primary Productivity (GPP)the total primary production of an ecosystem58
6542553287Net Primary Productivity (NPP)the gross primary production of an ecosystem minus the energy used by the producers for respiration59
6542553288Keystone Speciesa species that is not necessarily abundant in a community yet experts strong control on community structure by the nature of its ecological role or niche60
6542553289Bottom-up Modela model of community organization in which mineral nutrients influence community organization by controlling plant or phytoplankton numbers, which in turn control herbivores, which in turn control predator numbers61
6542553290Top-down Modela model of community organization in which predation influences community organization by controlling herbivore numbers, which in turn control plant or phytoplankton numbers, which in turn control nutrient levels; also called the trophic cascade model62
6542553291Biological Magnificationa process in which retained substances become more concentrated at each high trophic level in a food chain63
6542553292Decomposersorganisms that absorb nutrients from nonliving organic material such as corpses, fallen plant material, the wastes of living organisms and converts them into inorganic forms; a detritivore64
6542553293Eutrophicationa process by which nutrients, particularly phosphorus and nitrogen, become highly concentrated in a body of water, leading to increased growth of organisms such as algae or cyanobacteria65
6542553294Fundamental Nichethe niche potentially occupied by that species66
6542553295Realized Nichethe portion of the fundamental niche that a species actually occupies in the environment67
6542553296Invasive Speciesa species often introduced by humans, that takes hold outside its native range68
6542553297Altruismbehavior that increases fitness of another individual but decreases their own fitness69
6542553298Kin selectionenhancing the reproductive success of one's relatives70
6542553299Nitrificationammonia is converted to nitrates and nitrites71
6542553300Ammonificationdecomposers convert organic nitrogen to ammonia72
6542553307Density dependent factorfactor that affects population based on size (disease, predation etc)73
6542553308Density independent factorfactor that affect population regardless of size (weather, humans etc)74
6542553309Species diversityvariety of organisms in a community75
6542553310Species richnessthe number of different species in a community76
6542553311Relative abundanceevenness of distribution of individuals among species in a community77

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