AP Biology Unit 8 – Flashcards

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ecology
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the study of how organisms interact with their environment
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abiotic
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nonliving
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biotic
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pertaining to the living organisms in the environment
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organismal ecology
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the branch of ecology concerned with the morphological, physiological, and behavioral ways in which individual organisms meet the challenges posed by their biotic and abiotic environments
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population
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a localized group of individuals that belong to the same biological species (that are capable of interbreeding and producing fertile offspring)
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population ecology
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the study of populations in relation to the environment, including environmental influences on population density and distribution, age structure, and variations in population size
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community
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all the organisms that inhabit a particular area; an assemblage of populations of different species living close enough together for potential interaction
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community ecology
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the study of how interactions between species affect community structure and organization
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ecosystem
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all the organisms in a given area as well as the abiotic factors with which they interact; a community and its physical environment
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ecosystem ecology
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the study of energy flow and the cycling of chemicals among the various biotic and abiotic factors in an ecosystem
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landscape
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several different, primarily terrestrial ecosystems linked by exchanges of energy, materials, and organisms
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landscape ecology
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the study of past, present, and future patterns of landscape use, as well as ecosystem management and the biodiversity of interacting ecosystems
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patchiness
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localized variation in environmental conditions within an ecosystem, arranged spatially into a complex of discrete areas that may be characterized by distinctive groups of species or ecosystem processes
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biosphere
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the entire portion of Earth inhabited by life; the sum of all the planet's ecosystems
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precautionary principle
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a guiding principle in making decisions about the environment, cautioning to consider carefully the potential consequences of actions
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dispersal
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the distribution of individuals within geographic population boundaries
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climate
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the prevailing weather conditions at a locality
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macroclimate
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large-scale variations in climate; the climate of an entire region
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microclimate
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very fine scale variations of climate, such as the specific climatic conditions underneath a log
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tropics
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latitudes between 23.5° north and south
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turnover (apple? no)
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the mixing of waters as a result of changing water-temperature profiles in a lake
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biome
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any of the world's major ecosystems, classified according to the predominant vegetation and characterized by adaptations of organisms to that particular environment
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photic zone
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the narrow top slice of the ocean, where light permeates sufficiently for photosynthesis to occur
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aphotic zone
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the part of the ocean beneath the photic zone, where light does not penetrate sufficiently for photosynthesis to occur
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benthic zone
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the bottom surface of an aquatic environment
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benthos
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the communities of organisms living in the benthic zone of an aquatic biome
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detritus
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dead organic matter
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thermocline
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a narrow stratum of rapid temperature change in the ocean and in many temperate-zone lakes
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oligotrophic lake
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a nutrient-poor, oxygen-rich, clear, deep lake with few phytoplankton
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eutrophic lake
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a nutrient-rich and oxygen-poor lake, having a high rate of biological productivity
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littoral zone
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in a lake, the shallow, well-lit waters close to shore
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limnetic zone
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in a lake, the well-lit, open surface waters farther from shore
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wetland
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an ecosystem intermediate between an aquatic one and a terrestrial one. Wetland soil is saturated with water permanently or periodically
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estuary
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the area where a freshwater stream or river merges with the ocean
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seascape
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several different, primarily aquatic ecosystems linked by exchanges of energy, materials, and organisms
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intertidal zone
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the shallow zone of the ocean where land meets water
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oceanic zone
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the region of water lying over deep areas beyond the continental shelf
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oceanic pelagic biome
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most of the ocean's waters far from shore, constantly mixed by ocean currents
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coral reef
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a warm-water, tropical ecosystem dominated by the hard skeletal structures secreted primarily by the resident cnidarians
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neritic zone
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the shallow region of the ocean overlying the continental shelf
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pelagic zone
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the area of the ocean past the continental shelf, with areas of open water often reaching to very great depths
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deep-sea hydrothermal vent
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a dark, hot, oxygen-deficient environment associated with volcanic activity. The food producers are chemoautotrophic prokaryotes
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climograph
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a plot of the temperature and precipitation in a particular region
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canopy
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the uppermost layer of vegetation in a terrestrial biome
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ecotone
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the transition from one type of habitat or ecosystem to another, such as the transition from a forest to a grassland
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savanna
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a tropical grassland biome with scattered individual trees, large herbivores, and three distinct seasons based primarily on rainfall, maintained by occasional fires and drought
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chaparral
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a scrubland biome of dense, spiny evergreen shrubs found at midlatitudes along coasts where cold ocean currents circulate offshore; characterized by mild, rainy winters and long, hot, dry summers
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temperate broadleaf forest
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a biome located throughout midlatitude regions where there is sufficient moisture to support the growth of large, broadleaf deciduous trees
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tundra
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a biome at the extreme limits of plant growth. At the northernmost limits, it is called arctic tundra, and at high altitudes, where plant forms are limited to low shrubby or matlike vegetation, it is called alpine tundra
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permafrost
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a permanently frozen stratum below the arctic tundra
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agonistic behavior
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a type of behavior involving a contest of some kind that determines which competitor gains access to some resource, such as food or mates
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altruism
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behavior that reduces an individual's fitness while increasing the fitness of another individual
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associative learning
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the acquired ability to associate one stimulus with another; also called classical conditioning
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behavioral ecology
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the scientific study of animal behavior, including how it is controlled and how it develops, evolves, and contributes to survival and reproductive success
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classical conditioning
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a type of associative learning; the association of a normally irrelevant stimulus with a fixed behavioral response
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coefficient of relatedness
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the probability that a particular gene present in one individual will also be inherited from a common parent or ancestor in a second individual
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cognition
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the ability of an animal's nervous system to perceive, store, process, and use information obtained by its sensory receptors
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cognitive ethology
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the scientific study of cognition; the study of the connection between data processing by nervous systems and animal behavior
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cognitive map
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a representation within the nervous system of spatial relations between objects in an animal's environment
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communication
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animal behavior involving transmission of, reception of, and response to signals
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culture
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the ideas, customs, skills, rituals, and similar activities of a people or group that are passed along to succeeding generations
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ethology
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the study of animal behavior in natural conditions
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fixed action pattern (FAP)
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a sequence of behavioral acts that is essentially unchangeable and usually carried to completion once initiated
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foraging
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behavior necessary to recognize, search for, capture, and consume food
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game theory
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an approach to evaluating alternative strategies in situations where the outcome depends not only on each individual's strategy but also on the strategies of other individuals; a way of thinking about behavioral evolution in situations where the fitness of a particular behavioral phenotype is influenced by other behavioral phenotypes in the population
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habituation
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a very simple type of learning that involves a loss of responsiveness to stimuli that convey little or no information
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Hamilton's rule
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the principle that for natural selection to favor an altruistic act, the benefit to the recipient, devalued by the coefficient of relatedness, must exceed the cost to the altruist
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imprinting
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a type of learned behavior with a significant innate component, acquired during a limited critical period
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inclusive fitness
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the total effect an individual has on proliferating its genes by producing its own offspring and by providing aid that enables other close relatives to increase the production of their offspring
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innate behavior
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behavior that is developmentally fixed and under strong genetic control. Innate behavior is exhibited in virtually the same form by all individuals in a population despite internal and external environmental differences during development and throughout their lifetimes
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kin selection
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a phenomenon of inclusive fitness, used to explain altruistic behavior between related individuals
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kinesis
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a change in activity or turning rate in response to a stimulus
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landmark
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a point of reference for orientation during navigation
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learning
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a behavioral change resulting from experience
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mate choice copying
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behavior in which individuals in a population copy the mate choice of others, apparently as a result of social learning
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monogamous
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a type of relationship in which one male mates with just one female
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operant conditioning
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a type of associative learning in which an animal learns to associate one of its own behaviors with a reward or punishment and then tends to repeat or avoid that behavior; also called trial-and-error learning
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optimal foraging theory
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the basis for analyzing behavior as a compromise of feeding costs versus feeding benefits
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pheromone
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in animals and fungi, a small, volatile chemical that functions in communication and that in animals acts much like a hormone in influencing physiology and behavior
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polyandry
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a polygamous mating system involving one female and many males
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polygamous
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a type of relationship in which an individual of one sex mates with several of the other
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polygyny
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a polygamous mating system involving one male and many females
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promiscuous
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a type of relationship in which mating occurs with no strong pair-bonds or lasting relationships
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proximate question
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in animal behavior, an inquiry that focuses on the environmental stimuli, if any, that trigger a particular behavioral act, as well as the genetic, physiological, and anatomical mechanisms underlying it
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reciprocal altruism
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altruistic behavior between unrelated individuals, whereby the current altruistic individual benefits in the future when the current beneficiary reciprocates
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sensitive period
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a limited phase in an individual animal's development when learning of particular behaviors can take place
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sign stimulus
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an external sensory stimulus that triggers a fixed action pattern
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signal
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a behavior that causes a change in behavior in another animal
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social learning
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modification of behavior through the observation of other individuals
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sociobiology
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the study of social behavior based on evolutionary theory
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spatial learning
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modification of behavior based on experience of the spatial structure of the environment
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taxis
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movement toward or away from a stimulus
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ultimate question
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in animal behavior, an inquiry that focuses on the evolutionary significance of a behavioral act
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age structure
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the relative number of individuals of each age in a population
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big-bang reproduction
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a life history in which adults have but a single reproductive opportunity to produce large numbers of offspring, such as the life history of the Pacific salmon; also known as semelparity
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carrying capacity
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the maximum population size that can be supported by the available resources, symbolized as K
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clumped
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describing a dispersion pattern in which individuals are aggregated in patches
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cohort
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a group of individuals of the same age, from birth until all are dead
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demographic transition
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a shift from zero population growth in which birth rates and death rates are high to zero population growth characterized instead by low birth and death rates
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demography
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the study of statistics relating to births and deaths in populations
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density
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the number of individuals per unit area or volume
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density dependent
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referring to any characteristic that varies according to an increase in population density
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density independent
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referring to any characteristic that is not affected by population density
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dispersion
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the pattern of spacing among individuals within geographic population boundaries
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ecological capacity
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the actual resource base of a country
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ecological footprint
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a method to use multiple constraints to estimate the human carrying capacity of Earth by calculating the aggregate land and water area in various ecosystem categories that is appropriated by a nation to produce all the resources it consumes and to absorb all the waste it generates
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emigration
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the movement of individuals out of a population
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exponential population growth
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the geometric increase of a population as it grows in an ideal, unlimited environment
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immigration
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the influx of new individuals from other areas
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infant mortality
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the number of infant deaths per 1, 000 live births
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iteroparity
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a life history in which adults produce large numbers of offspring over many years; also known as repeated reproduction
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K-selection
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the concept that in certain (K-selected) populations, life history is centered around producing relatively few offspring that have a good chance of survival
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life expectancy at birth
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the predicted average length of life at birth
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life history
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the series of events from birth through reproduction and death
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life table
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a table of data summarizing mortality in a population
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logistic population growth
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a model describing population growth that levels off as population size approaches carrying capacity
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mark-recapture method
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a sampling technique used to estimate wildlife populations
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metapopulation
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a subdivided population of a single species
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population
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a localized group of individuals that belong to the same biological species (that are capable of interbreeding and producing fertile offspring)
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population dynamics
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the study of how complex interactions between biotic and abiotic factors influence variations in population size
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population ecology
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the study of populations in relation to the environment, including environmental influences on population density and distribution, age structure, and variations in population size
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random
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describing a dispersion pattern in which individuals are spaced in a patternless, unpredictable way
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repeated reproduction
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a life history in which adults produce large numbers of offspring over many years; also known as iteroparity
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reproductive table
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an age-specific summary of the reproductive rates in a population
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r-selection
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the concept that in certain (r-selected) populations, a high reproductive rate is the chief determinant of life history
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semelparity
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a life history in which adults have but a single reproductive opportunity to produce large numbers of offspring, such as the life history of the Pacific salmon; also known as big-bang reproduction
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survivorship curve
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a plot of the number of members of a cohort that are still alive at each age; one way to represent age-specific mortality
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territoriality
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a behavior in which an animal defends a bounded physical space against encroachment by other individuals, usually of its own species. Territory defense may involve direct aggression or indirect mechanisms such as scent marking or singing
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uniform
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describing a dispersion pattern in which individuals are evenly distributed
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zero population growth (ZPG)
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a period of stability in population size, when the per capita birth rate and death rate are equal
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aposematic coloration
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the bright coloration of animals with effective physical or chemical defenses that acts as a warning to predators
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Batesian mimicry
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a type of mimicry in which a harmless species looks like a species that is poisonous or otherwise harmful to predators
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biomanipulation
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a technique for restoring eutrophic lakes that reduces populations of algae by manipulating the higher-level consumers in the community rather than by changing nutrient levels or adding chemical treatments
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biomass
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the dry weight of organic matter comprising a group of organisms in a particular habitat
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bottom-up model
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a model of community organization in which mineral nutrients control community organization because nutrients control plant numbers, which in turn control herbivore numbers, which in turn control predator numbers
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character displacement
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the tendency for characteristics to be more divergent in sympatric populations of two species than in allopatric populations of the same two species
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coevolution
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the mutual evolutionary influence between two different species interacting with each other and reciprocally influencing each other's adaptations
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commensalism
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a symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits but the other is neither helped nor harmed
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community
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all the organisms that inhabit a particular area; an assemblage of populations of different species living close enough together for potential interaction
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competitive exclusion
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the 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 population
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cryptic coloration
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camouflage, making potential prey difficult to spot against its background
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disturbance
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a force that changes a biological community and usually removes organisms from it. Disturbances, such as fire and storms, play pivotal roles in structuring many biological communities
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dominant species
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those species in a community that have the highest abundance or highest biomass. These species exert a powerful control over the occurrence and distribution of other species
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dynamic stability hypothesis
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the idea that long food chains are less stable than short chains
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ecological niche
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the sum total of a species' use of the biotic and abiotic resources in its environment
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ecological succession
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transition in the species composition of a biological community, often following ecological disturbance of the community; the establishment of a biological community in an area virtually barren of life
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ectoparasite
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a parasite that feeds on the external surface of a host
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endoparasite
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a parasite that lives within a host
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energetic hypothesis
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the concept that the length of a food chain is limited by the inefficiency of energy transfer along the chain
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evapotranspiration
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the evaporation of water from soil plus the transpiration of water from plants
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facilitator
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a species that has a positive effect on the survival and reproduction of other species in a community and that contributes to community structure
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food chain
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the pathway along which food is transferred from trophic level to trophic level, beginning with producers
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food web
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the elaborate, interconnected feeding relationships in an ecosystem
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herbivory
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an interaction in which an herbivore eats parts of a plant or alga
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host
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the larger participant in a symbiotic relationship, serving as home and feeding ground to the symbiont
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individualistic hypothesis
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the concept, put forth by H. A. Gleason, that a plant community is a chance assemblage of species found in the same area simply because they happen to have similar abiotic requirements
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integrated hypothesis
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the concept, put forth by F. E. Clements, that a community is an assemblage of closely linked species, locked into association by mandatory biotic interactions that cause the community to function as an integrated unit, a sort of superorganism
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intermediate disturbance hypothesis
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the concept that moderate levels of disturbance can foster greater species diversity than low or high levels of disturbance
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interspecies interaction
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relationships between species of a community
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interspecific competition
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competition for resources between plants, between animals, or between decomposers when resources are in short supply
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keystone species
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a species that is not necessarily abundant in a community yet exerts strong control on community structure by the nature of its ecological role or niche
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Müllerian mimicry
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a mutual mimicry by two unpalatable species
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mutualism
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a symbiotic relationship in which both participants benefit
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niche
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see ecological niche. The sum total of a species' use of the biotic and abiotic resources in its environment
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nonequilibrium model
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the model of communities that emphasizes that they are not stable in time but constantly changing after being buffeted by disturbances
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parasite
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an organism that benefits by living in or on another organism at the expense of the host
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parasitoidism
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a type of parasitism in which an insect lays eggs on or in a living host; the larvae then feed on the body of the host, eventually killing it
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pathogen
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a disease-causing agent
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predation
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an interaction between species in which one species, the predator, eats the other, the prey
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primary succession
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a type of ecological succession that occurs in a virtually lifeless area, where there were originally no organisms and where soil has not yet formed
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redundancy model
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the concept, put forth by H. A. and Brian Walker, that most of the species in a community are not tightly coupled with one another (that is, the web of life is very loose). According to this model, an increase or decrease in one species in a community has little effect on other species, which operate independently
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relative abundance
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differences in the abundance of different species within a community
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resource partitioning
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the 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 coexisting species
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rivet model
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the concept, put forth by Paul and Anne Ehrlich, that many or most of the species in a community are associated tightly with other species in a web of life. According to this model, an increase or decrease in one species in a community affects many other species
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secondary succession
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a type of succession that occurs where an existing community has been cleared by some disturbance that leaves the soil intact
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species diversity
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the number and relative abundance of species in a biological community
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species richness
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the number of species in a biological community
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species-area curve
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the biodiversity pattern, first noted by Alexander von Humboldt, that illustrates that the larger the geographic area of a community, the greater the number of species
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top-down model
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a model of community organization in which predation controls community organization because predators control herbivores, which in turn control plants, which in turn control nutrient levels; also called the trophic cascade model
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trophic structure
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the different feeding relationships in an ecosystem, which determine the route of energy flow and the pattern of chemical cycling
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actual evapotranspiration
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the amount of water annually transpired by plants and evaporated from a landscape, usually measured in millimeters
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biogeochemical cycle
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any of the various nutrient circuits, which involve both biotic and abiotic components of ecosystems
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biological magnification
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a trophic process in which retained substances become more concentrated with each link in the food chain
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critical load
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the amount of added nutrient, usually nitrogen or phosphorus, that can be absorbed by plants without damaging ecosystem integrity
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decomposer
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any of the saprobic fungi and prokaryotes that absorb nutrients from nonliving organic material such as corpses, fallen plant material, and the wastes of living organisms, and convert them into inorganic forms
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detritivore
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a consumer that derives its energy from nonliving organic material; a decomposer
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detritus
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dead organic matter
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ecosystem
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all the organisms in a given area as well as the abiotic factors with which they interact; a community and its physical environment
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eutrophication
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a 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. Cultural eutrophication refers to situations where the nutrients added to the water body originate mainly from human sources, such as agricultural drainage or sewage
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greenhouse effect
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the warming of planet Earth due to the atmospheric accumulation of carbon dioxide, which absorbs relected infrared radiation and re-reflects some of it back toward Earth
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green world hypothesis
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the conjecture that terrestrial herbivores consume relatively little plant biomass because they are held in check by a variety of factors, including predators, parasites, and disease
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gross primary production (GPP)
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the total primary production of an ecosystem
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limiting nutrient
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an element that must be added for production to increase in a particular area
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net primary production (NPP)
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the gross primary production of an ecosystem minus the energy used by the producers for respiration
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primary consumer
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an herbivore; an organism in the trophic level of an ecosystem that eats plants or algae
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primary producer
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an autotroph, usually a photosynthetic organism. Collectively, autotrophs make up the trophic level of an ecosystem that ultimately supports all other levels
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primary production
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the amount of light energy converted to chemical energy (organic compounds) by autotrophs in an ecosystem during a given time period
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production efficiency
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the fraction of energy stored in food that is not used for respiration
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secondary consumer
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a member of the trophic level of an ecosystem consisting of carnivores that eat herbivores
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secondary production
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the amount of chemical energy in consumers' food that is converted to their own new biomass during a given time period
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tertiary consumer
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a member of the trophic level of an ecosystem consisting of carnivores that eat mainly other carnivores
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trophic efficiency
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the percentage of production transferred from one trophic level to the next
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turnover time
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the time required to replace the standing crop of a population or group of populations (for example, of phytoplankton), calculated as the ratio of standing crop biomass to production
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biodiversity hot spot
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a relatively small area with an exceptional concentration of endemic species and a large number of endangered and threatened species
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biological augmentation
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an approach to restoration ecology that uses organisms to add essential materials to a degraded ecosystem
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bioremediation
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the use of living organisms to detoxify and restore polluted and degraded ecosystems
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conservation biology
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the integrated study of ecology, evolutionary biology, physiology, molecular biology, genetics, and behavioral biology in an effort to sustain biological diversity at all levels
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ecosystem services
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functions performed by natural ecosystems that directly or indirectly benefit humans
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effective population size
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an estimate of the size of a population based on the numbers of females and males that successfully breed; generally smaller than the total population
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endangered species
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a species that is in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range
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extinction vortex
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a downward population spiral in which positive-feedback loops of inbreeding and genetic drift cause a small population to shrink and, unless reversed, become extinct
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introduced species
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a species moved by humans, either intentionally or accidentally, from its native location to a new geographic region; also called an exotic species
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landscape ecology
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the study of past, present, and future patterns of landscape use, as well as ecosystem management and the biodiversity of interacting ecosystems
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minimum viable population (MVP)
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the smallest population size at which a species is able to sustain its numbers and survive
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movement corridor
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a series of small clumps or a narrow strip of quality habitat (usable by organisms) that connects otherwise isolated patches of quality habitat
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overexploitation
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harvesting by humans of wild plants or animals at rates exceeding the ability of populations of those species to rebound
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population viability analysis (PVA)
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a method of predicting whether or not a population will persist
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restoration ecology
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a goal-directed science that applies ecological principles in an effort to return degraded ecosystems to conditions as similar as possible to their natural, predegraded state
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sustainable development
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the long-term prosperity of human societies and the ecosystems that support them
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zoned reserve
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an extensive region of land that includes one or more areas undisturbed by humans surrounded by lands that have been changed by human activity and are used for economic gain
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