Unit 1: The Living World: Ecosystems

0.0(0)
Studied by 0 people
0%Unit 1 Mastery
0%Exam Mastery
Build your Mastery score
multiple choiceMultiple Choice
call kaiCall Kai
Supplemental Materials
Card Sorting

1/49

Last updated 2:13 AM on 3/12/26
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced
Call with Kai

No analytics yet

Send a link to your students to track their progress

50 Terms

1
New cards

Ecosystem

A defined area where biotic (living) and abiotic (nonliving) components interact as a system through exchanges of energy and matter.

2
New cards

Biotic components

Living or once-living parts of an ecosystem (e.g., plants, animals, fungi, bacteria, decomposers, detritivores).

3
New cards

Abiotic components

Nonliving physical and chemical factors in an ecosystem (e.g., sunlight, temperature, water, soil, dissolved oxygen, salinity, pH, nutrients).

4
New cards

Population

All individuals of one species in a given area that interact with each other.

5
New cards

Community

Multiple interacting populations (different species) living in the same area.

6
New cards

Habitat

The place an organism lives (its “address”).

7
New cards

Niche

An organism’s role (its “job”): how it gets energy, uses resources, fits into food webs, and interacts with biotic and abiotic factors.

8
New cards

Generalist species

A species with a broad niche that can use a wide range of resources and tolerate many conditions; often persists through change.

9
New cards

Specialist species

A species with a narrow niche that relies on specific resources or conditions; often more vulnerable to disturbance and extinction risk.

10
New cards

Symbiosis

A close, long-term biological interaction between two different organisms (often different species).

11
New cards

Mutualism

A symbiotic relationship in which both species benefit.

12
New cards

Commensalism

A symbiotic relationship in which one species benefits and the other is unaffected.

13
New cards

Parasitism

A relationship in which one organism benefits while the other is harmed (the host).

14
New cards

Predation

An interaction in which a predator hunts, kills, and eats prey.

15
New cards

Competition

An interaction where organisms vie for limited resources such as food, mates, or territory; can occur within or between species.

16
New cards

Resource partitioning

A way competing species coexist by dividing resources (using them in different ways, places, or times), reducing direct competition.

17
New cards

Law of Tolerance

A species’ existence, abundance, and distribution depend on its tolerance to physical and chemical (abiotic) factors; outside tolerance limits, survival/reproduction decline.

18
New cards

Limiting factor

Any environmental factor that restricts population growth, abundance, or distribution.

19
New cards

Density-dependent factor

A limiting factor that becomes stronger as population density increases (e.g., disease, competition, predation).

20
New cards

Density-independent factor

A limiting factor that affects populations regardless of density (e.g., drought, storms, fire, temperature extremes).

21
New cards

Carrying capacity

The maximum population size an environment can sustain over time given available resources and limiting factors.

22
New cards

Negative feedback loop

A feedback that counteracts change and tends to stabilize a system (reduces the original disturbance).

23
New cards

Positive feedback loop

A feedback that amplifies change; “positive” means self-reinforcing, not beneficial.

24
New cards

Energy flow

The one-way movement of energy through trophic levels; energy enters (usually as sunlight) and is ultimately lost as heat.

25
New cards

Matter cycling

The movement and reuse of atoms (nutrients) among organisms and abiotic reservoirs (air, water, soil, rocks) through biogeochemical cycles.

26
New cards

Second Law of Thermodynamics

As energy is transferred or transformed, more becomes unusable (often dispersed as heat), helping explain why energy does not cycle in ecosystems.

27
New cards

Decomposer

An organism (often bacteria or fungi) that breaks down dead biomass and waste, returning nutrients to soil/water and supporting continued primary production.

28
New cards

Trophic level

An organism’s feeding position in a food chain or food web (how many steps it is from the start of energy input via producers).

29
New cards

Food web

A network of interconnected food chains showing multiple feeding relationships and energy transfer pathways in an ecosystem.

30
New cards

10% rule

A rule of thumb that only about 10% of energy at one trophic level becomes new biomass available to the next level; most is lost through metabolism and heat.

31
New cards

Bioaccumulation

A chemical builds up in an organism over time because intake exceeds elimination (especially for persistent, fat-soluble pollutants).

32
New cards

Biomagnification

Increasing concentration of a pollutant at higher trophic levels because predators consume many contaminated prey.

33
New cards

Gross primary productivity (GPP)

The total rate at which producers capture energy via photosynthesis (total energy fixed).

34
New cards

Net primary productivity (NPP)

The rate of energy stored as producer biomass after respiration; NPP = GPP − R, and it is the energy available to consumers and decomposers.

35
New cards

Biogeochemical cycle

The movement of a chemical element through living organisms (bio), Earth’s crust/soil/rocks (geo), and air/water via chemical processes.

36
New cards

Nitrogen fixation

Conversion of atmospheric N2 into biologically usable forms (mainly ammonia/ammonium), performed by certain bacteria (e.g., Rhizobium in legumes), lightning, or industrial processes.

37
New cards

Nitrification

A bacterial process converting ammonia/ammonium to nitrite and then nitrate.

38
New cards

Denitrification

A process where anaerobic bacteria convert nitrate to gaseous nitrogen forms (e.g., N2), returning nitrogen to the atmosphere (can also produce N2O).

39
New cards

Phosphorus cycle

The movement of phosphorus through rocks, soils, water, and organisms; it lacks a major atmospheric gas phase and often cycles slowly via weathering and sedimentation.

40
New cards

Ocean acidification

A decrease in ocean pH when CO2 dissolves in seawater; can disrupt coral reef formation and reduce carbonate availability for shells/skeletons.

41
New cards

Evapotranspiration

The combined transfer of water from land to the atmosphere via evaporation plus plant transpiration.

42
New cards

Aquifer

A geologic formation that stores water in quantities sufficient to support a well or spring.

43
New cards

Water table

The level below which the ground is saturated with water.

44
New cards

Aquifer depletion

A drop in groundwater levels when pumping exceeds recharge, lowering the water table and potentially causing shortages and other impacts.

45
New cards

Saltwater intrusion

The movement of saltwater into freshwater aquifers, often caused by overpumping coastal groundwater.

46
New cards

Dissolved oxygen (DO)

Oxygen dissolved in water that many aquatic organisms need; influenced by temperature, mixing, photosynthesis (adds), and respiration/decomposition (removes).

47
New cards

Biodiversity

The variety of life in an area (including genetic, species, and ecosystem diversity) linked to ecosystem resilience and function.

48
New cards

Species richness

The number of different species present in a community or ecosystem.

49
New cards

Species evenness

How evenly individuals are distributed among the species in a community.

50
New cards

Ecosystem services

Benefits humans receive from functioning ecosystems, including provisioning, regulating, supporting, and cultural services.

Explore top notes

note
Indirect Values
Updated 1514d ago
0.0(0)
note
Hello
Updated 1202d ago
0.0(0)
note
Essay
Updated 1514d ago
0.0(0)
note
26.2 History of Life on Earth
Updated 1789d ago
0.0(0)
note
123
Updated 856d ago
0.0(0)
note
Cetaceans - Marine Biology
Updated 1772d ago
0.0(0)
note
Indirect Values
Updated 1514d ago
0.0(0)
note
Hello
Updated 1202d ago
0.0(0)
note
Essay
Updated 1514d ago
0.0(0)
note
26.2 History of Life on Earth
Updated 1789d ago
0.0(0)
note
123
Updated 856d ago
0.0(0)
note
Cetaceans - Marine Biology
Updated 1772d ago
0.0(0)

Explore top flashcards

flashcards
faf
40
Updated 972d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
faf
40
Updated 972d ago
0.0(0)