A | B |
ecology | scientific study of the interactions among organisms and between organisms and their environment |
biotic factor | any living part of an environment |
abiotic factor | nonliving physical or chemical condition in an environment |
population | group of individuals of the same species living in a particular area at the same time |
community | all the organisms living in an area |
ecosystem | community of living things plus the nonliving features of the environment that support them |
biosphere | all the parts of the planet that are inhabited by living things; sum of all Earth's ecosystems |
habitat | an organisms's specific environment, with characteristic abiotic and biotic factors |
tropics | regions between 23.5 degress N latitude and 23.5 degress S latitude; warmest temperature zones on Earth |
polar zones | the regions north of the Arctic Circle and south of the Antarctic circle that receive the smallest amount of direct sunlight year-round |
temperate zones | latitudes between the tropics and polar regions in each hemisphere |
current | riverlike flow pattern within a body of water |
microclimate | climate in a specific area that varies from the surrounding climate region |
biome | major type of terrestrial ecosystem that covers a large region of Earth |
tropical rain forest | type of forest near the equator that receives as much as 250cm of rainfall yearly |
savanna | grassland with scattered tress; found in tropical regions of Africa, Australia and South America |
desert | land area that receives less than 30 cm of rain per year |
chaparral | temperate coastal biome dominated by dense everygreen shrubs |
temperate grassland | biome characterized by deep, nutrient-rich soil that supports many grass species |
temperate deciduous forest | forest in a temperate region characterized by trees that drop their leaves annually |
coniferous forest | forest populated by cone-bearing evergreen trees; mostly found in northern latitudes |
tundra | biome in the Arctic Circle or on high mountaintops, characterized by bitterly cold temperatures and high winds |
permafrost | permanently frozen subsoil |
photic zone | regions of a body of water where light penetrates, enabling photosynthesis |
phytoplankton | microscopic alggae and cyanobacteria that carry out photosynthesis |
aphotic zone | deep areas of a body of water where light levels are too low to support photosynthesis |
benthic zone | bottom of an aquatic ecosystem; consists of sand and sediment and supports its own community of organisms |
estuary | area where gresh water from streams and rivers merges with salty ocean water; productive ecosystem |
pelagic zone | open water above ocean floor |
intertidal zone | area of shore between the high-tide and low-tide lines |
neritic zone | area of ocean that extends from the low-tide line out to the edge of the continental shelf |
oceanic zone | vast open ocean from the edge of the continental shelf outward |
zooplankton | microscopic animals that swim or drift near the surface of aquatic environments |
hydrothermal vent | opening in the ocean floor where hot gases and minerals escape from Earth's interior |