Ch. 4 Key Terms Flashcards
ecosystem
a community of organisms and their abiotic environment
biotic factor
an environmental factor that is associated with or results from the activities of living organisms
abiotic factor
describes the nonliving part of the environment, including water, rocks, light, and temperature
organism
a living thing; anything that can carry out life processes independently
species
a group of organisms that are closely related and can mate to produce fertile offspring; also the level of classification below genus and above subspecies
population
a group of organisms of the same species that live in a specific geographical area and interbreed
community
a group of various species that live in the same habitat and interact with each other
habitat
the place where an organisms usually lives
natural selection
the process by which individuals that are better adapted to their environment survive and reproduce more successfully than less well adapted individuals do
evolution
a heritable change in the characteristics within a population from one generation to the next
adaptation
the process of becoming adapted to an environment
artificial selection
the selective breeding of organisms for specific desirable characteristics
resistance
in biology, the ability of an organism to tolerate a chemical or disease-causing agent
archaea
prokaryotes that are distinguished from other prokaryotes by differences in their genetics and in the makeup of their cell wall
bacteria
extremely small, single-celled organisms that usually have a cell wall and reproduce by cell division
fungus
an organism whose cells have nuclei rigid cell walls and no chlorophyll and that belongs to the kingdom fungi
protist
an organism that belongs to the kingdom Protista
gymnosperm
a woody vascular seed plant whose seeds are not enclosed by an ovary or fruit
angiosperm
a flowering plant that produces seeds within a fruit
invertebrate
an animal that does not have a backbone
vertebrate
an animal that has a backbone; includes mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fish