Unit 4- Ecology Flashcards
the non-living physical and chemical attributes of a system, for example light or temperature in an environment.
Abiotic factors
attributes in an ecosystem that refer to living organisms.
Biotic factors
a statistical test of the fit between a theoretical frequency distribution and a frequency distribution of observed data for which each observation may fall into one of several classes.
Chi-squared test
formed by populations of different species living together and interacting with each other.
Community
heterotrophs that feed on living organisms by ingestion.
Consumers
when members of different species breed together.
Crossbreeding
heterotrophs that obtain organic nutrients from dead organisms by internal digestion.
Detritivores
community of different species interacting with each other and with the chemical and physical factors making up the non-living environment.
Ecosystem
an organism that gets its organic nutrients by feeding on autotrophs or other heterotrophs.
Heterotroph
chemical elements, compounds, and other substances necessary to sustain life processes that are not chemically carbon-based.
Inorganic nutrients
when two members of the same species mate and produce offspring.
Interbreeding
an experimental tool that brings a small part of the natural environment under controlled conditions.
Mesocosm
a group of organisms of the same species who live in the same area at the same time.
Population
square or rectangular plot of land, marked off at random to isolate a sample and determine the percentage of vegetation and animals occurring within the marked area.
Quadrat sampling
a number chosen by a random sampling from a table or generated by a computer.
Random numbers
heterotrophs that obtain organic nutrients from detritus by external digestion.
Saprotrophs
groups of organisms that can potentially interbreed to produce fertile offspring.
species
communities that are capable of being maintained at a steady level without exhausting natural resources or causing severe ecological damage.
Sustainable communities
an organism that uses solar energy or chemical energy to manufacture the organic compounds it needs as nutrients from simple inorganic compounds obtained from its environment.
autotroph
the total mass of living matter within a given unit of environmental area, expressed in terms of living or dry weight per unit area.
biomass
a series of metabolic processes that take place within a cell in which biochemical energy is produced from organic substances and stored as energy carriers (ATP) for use in the energy-requiring activities of the cell.
cell respiration
energy released from a substance, or absorbed in the formation of a chemical compound, during a chemical reaction.
chemical energy