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APES Friedland Chapter 3 Flashcards

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7401243862BiosphereThe region of our planet where life resides, the combination of all ecosystems on Earth.0
7401243863ProducerAn organism that uses the energy of the Sun to produce usable forms of energy. Also known as an autotroph.1
7401243864PhotosynthesisThe process by which producers use solar energy to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose.2
7401243865Cellular respirationThe process by which cells unlock the energy of chemical compounds.3
7401243866Aerobic respirationThe process by which cells convert glucose and oxygen into energy, carbon dioxide, and water.4
7401243867Anaerobic respirationThe process by which cells convert glucose into energy in the absence of oxygen.5
7401243868ConsumerAn organism that is incapable of photosynthesis and must obtain its energy by consuming other organisms. Also known as a heterotroph.6
7401243869HerbivoreA consumer that eats producers. Also known as a primary consumer.7
7401243870CarnivoreA consumer that eats other consumers.8
7401243871Secondary consumerA carnivore that eats primary consumers.9
7401243872Tertiary consumerA carnivore that eats secondary consumers.10
7401243873Trophic levelsThe successive levels of organisms consuming one another.11
7401243874Food chainThe sequence of consumption from producers through tertiary consumers.12
7401243875Food webA complex model of how energy and matter move between trophic levels.13
7401243876ScavengerAn organism that consumes dead animals.14
7401243877DetritivoreAn organism that specializes in breaking down dead tissues and waste products into smaller particles.15
7401243878DecomposersFungi and bacteria that convert organic matter into small elements and molecules that can be recycled back into the ecosystems.16
7401243879Gross primary productivity (GPP)The total amount of solar energy that producers in an ecosystem capture via photosynthesis over a given amount of time.17
7401243880Net primary productivity (NPP)The energy captured by producers in an ecosystem minus the energy producers respire.18
7401243881BiomassThe total mass of all living matter in a specific area.19
7401243882Standing cropThe amount of biomass present in an ecosystem at a particular time.20
7401243883Ecological efficiencyThe proportion of consumed energy that can be passed from one trophic level to another.21
7401243884Trophic pyramidA representation of the distribution of biomass, numbers, or energy among trophic levels.22
7401243885Biogeochemical cycleThe movement of matter within and between ecosystems.23
7401243886Hydrologic cycleThe movement of water through the biosphere.24
7401243887TranspirationThe release of water from leaves during photosynthesis.25
7401243888EvapotranspirationThe combined amount of evaporation and transpiration.26
7401243889RunoffWater that moves across the land surface and into streams and rivers.27
7401243890Carbon cycleThe movement of carbon around the biosphere.28
7401243891MacronutrientOne of six key elements that organisms need in relatively large amounts: nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, calcium, magnesium, and sulfur.29
7401243892Limiting nutrientA nutrient required for the growth of an organism but available in a lower quantity than other nutrients.30
7401243893Nitrogen cycleThe movement of nitrogen around the biosphere.31
7401243894Nitrogen fixationA process by which some organisms can convert nitrogen gas molecules directly into ammonia.32
7401243895NitrificationThe conversion of ammonia into nitrite and then into nitrate.33
7401243896AssimilationThe process by which producers incorporate elements into their tissues.34
7401243897MineralizationThe 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.35
7401243898AmmonificationThe process by which fungal and bacterial decomposers break down the organic nitrogen found in dead bodies and waste products and convert it into inorganic ammonium.36
7401243899DenitrificationThe conversion of nitrate in a series of steps into the gases nitrous oxide and, eventually, nitrogen gas, which is emitted into the atmosphere37
7401243900LeachingThe transformation of dissolved molecules through the soil via groundwater.38
7401243901Phosphorus cycleThe movement of phosphorus around the biosphere.39
7401243902Algal boomA rapid increase in the algal production of a waterway.40
7401243903HypoxicLow in oxygen.41
7401243904Sulfur cycleThe movement of sulfur around the biosphere.42
7401243905Ecological DisturbanceAn event, caused by physical, chemical, or biological agents, resulting in changes in population size or community composition.43
7401243906WatershedAll land in a given landscape that drains into a particular stream, river, lake, or wetland.44
7401243907ResistanceA measure of how much a disturbance can affect flows of energy and matter in an ecosystem.45
7401243908ResilienceThe rate at which an ecosystem returns to its original state after a disturbance.46
7401243909Restoration ecologyThe study and implementation of restoring damaged ecosystems47
7401243910Intermediate disturbance hypothesisThe hypothesis that ecosystems experiencing intermediate levels of disturbance are more diverse than those with high or low disturbance levels.48
7401243911omnivorea person who eats both plants and animals49
7401243912percolationthe slow movement of water through the pores in soil or permeable rock.50
7401243913infiltrationthe seepage of water into soil or rock.51
7401243914this cycle has no atmospheric component.phosphorous52
7401243915primary consumerA consumer that eats producers. Also know as a herbivore.53
7401243916EutrophicationA process in which nutrients, such as nitrogen and phosphorus lead to algal blooms and hypoxic conditions.54

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