Community and Ecosystem Flashcards

1
Q

assemblage of populations living close enough together for potential possible interaction

A

community

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2
Q

is a collection of populations of all the organisms which occur together in a given place and time.

A

community

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3
Q

is also commonly used to refer to a subset of populations within the whole community, for example we talk about plant communities, insect communities, arthropod communities, small mammal communities, etc.

A

community

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4
Q

dependent on species diversity and certain species in the community

A

community structure

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5
Q

is commonly used to refer to the limitations set by species interactions on which species can coexist with which other

A

community structure

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6
Q

is also used to describe the physical arrangement of species in a community, such as the vertical arrangement of species in a forest (trees, shrubs and ground growing herbaceous (non-woody) plants.

A

community structure

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7
Q

Limitations set by species interactions on which species can coexist with which others

A

community structure

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8
Q

– limitation to coexistence, and they can apply to single species, as well as to groups of species.

A

assembly rules

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9
Q

can have emergent properties which arise from these interactions - properties which could not be predicted by studying the individual populations in isolation.

A

ecological communities

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10
Q

such as competition, predation, herbivory, parasitism, and commensalism affect the structuring of communities

A

interspecific interactions

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11
Q

total number of species in the community

A

species richness

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12
Q

proportion of each species in the community

A

relative abundance

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13
Q

way an organism uses its environment, species thus become more specialized

A

niche

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14
Q

include the total range of environmental conditions that are suitable for existence without the influence of interspecific competition or predation from other species

A

fundamental niche

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15
Q

part of the fundamental niche actually occupied by the species

A

realized niche

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16
Q

Characteristics of community (biological structure) (2)

A

dominance
species diversity

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17
Q

Characteristics of community (physical structure) (2)

A

vertical stratification
horizontal pattern

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18
Q

vertical structure/layering include

A

light
temperature
oxygen

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19
Q

where two or more different communities meet

A

edge

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20
Q

when edges are stable or permanent

A

inherent edge

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21
Q

temporary which result from natural disturbances or human activities

A

induced edge

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22
Q

consist of edges and border

A

boundary

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23
Q

where two or more communities not only meet but intergrade

A

ecotone

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24
Q

the transition layer between the warmer mixed water at the surface and the cooler deep water below

A

thermocline

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25
Q

succession of new environment (no plants)

A

primary succession

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26
Q

occurs on habitats previously lacking plants
➢example include sand dunes, lava flows, and other bare surfaces
➢generally lacking a seed bank

A

primary succession

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27
Q

recovery from a disturbance in existing environment (plants previously

A

secondary succession

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28
Q

following disturbance after blow-down or logging

A

secondary succession

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29
Q

include fires, floods, hurricanes, human activity)

A

disturbances

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30
Q

why does succession occur?

A

➢Early arriving plants can tolerate harsh conditions, facilitate later arriving species
➢Sometimes due to chance who arrives first
➢Type of climax community depend on climate, terrain, and history

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31
Q

why do communities stay the same?

A

➢Stability is lack of change
➢Resiliency is ability to return to a given state following a disturbance
➢Complexity does not ensure stability

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32
Q

assemblage of communities interacting with another together with the environment a distinct area

A

ecosystem

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33
Q

Characteristics of ecosystem

A

➢Interdependence of biotic and abiotic factors
➢Homeostasis – optimum condition and balance in nature
➢Self-sustaining – continuous flow of nutrient and energy
➢Consisting of the major communities

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34
Q

Ecosystem classification based on temp (4)

A

▪Torrid
▪Tropics
▪Temperate
▪Frigid

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35
Q

Ecosystem classification based on habitat or biome

A

aquatic
terrestrial

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36
Q

can be classified into freshwater and marine waters

A

aquatic biomes

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37
Q

fresh water biome (2)

A

lotic
lentic

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38
Q

running waters

A

lotic waters

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39
Q

standing waters

A

lentic waters

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40
Q

marine waters divided into:

A

pelagic
benthic

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41
Q

refer to waters divided into neritic and oceanic

A

pelagic water

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42
Q

consists of the water column of the open ocean and can be further divided into regions by depth.

A

pelagic zone

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43
Q

province above continental shelft

A

neritic province

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44
Q

province of the oceanic basins

A

oceanic province

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45
Q

refers to the bottom which includes the supralittoral, littoral, sublittoral

A

benthic waters

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46
Q

located in the sublittoral shelf

A

continental shelf

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47
Q

located in the bathyal zone

A

continental slope

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48
Q

located in the abyssal zon

A

abyssal plane

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49
Q

largest environment, it covers 70% of the Earth’s surface

A

marine

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50
Q

covers 70% of the Earth’s surface
➢Form a single vast interconnected water mass partially separated into divisions by the continents
➢Characterize by general equality in the composition and amount of dissolved substances (average of 35 ppt) due to continuous diffusion of sea water by means of currents, tides, and storms

A

marine

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51
Q

marine depth varies from intertidal zones to depths of ____ km

A

10.8

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52
Q

Temperature ranges from ___ in the tropics to -_____ in the Arctic, rarely fluctuates more than 5 celsius

A

32
-2.2

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53
Q

the ocean floor, including the intertidal zone (littoral zone)

A

benthic region

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54
Q

Include organisms that live on the floor of the continental shelf, of the continental slope, and the abyssal plain

Majority of the organisms are invertebrates that serve as food for the species of marine vertebrates

A

benthic region

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55
Q

the open waters, include floating organisms (planktons) e.g. phytoplanktons and zooplanktons and free-swimming organism (nektons) e.g. fishes, turtles, marine mammals

A

pelagic zone

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56
Q

Divided into neritic province and oceanic province

A

pelagic zone

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57
Q

shallow water above the continental shelf, with more nutrients and organisms because sunlight penetrate the waters up to the bottom

A

neritic province

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58
Q

– above the high tide mark

A

supratidal

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59
Q

between the high and low tide

A

intertidal

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60
Q

below the low tide mark

A

subtidal

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61
Q

the region of the open sea beyond the continental shelf, above the oceanic basins

A

oceanic province

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62
Q

receives abundant sunlight, planktons are abundant

A

epipelagic

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63
Q

(200-1,000m) – known as the twilight zone, fishes are the primary vertebrates, with cetaceans as frequent visitors

A

mesopelagic

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64
Q

(1,000-4,000) – area of cold, quiet water, permanent darkness, and increased pressure, inhabited by a lesser number of fishes with bioluminescent organs

A

bathypelagic

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65
Q

3,000-6,000m) – comprises a
region with almost
physical environment i.e. continually dark, cold (4oC) ad unchanging composition inhabited by rattails (Macrouridae), brotulas (ophidiidae), lumpfishes (cyclopteridae), and batfishes (ogrocephalidae)

A

abyssopelagic

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66
Q

beyond 6,000 meters, still unexplored, the deepest living fish is known as Abyssobrotula galatheae (Ophidiidae), a blind elongate fish that feeds on benthic invertebrates and lives at adepth ranging from 3,100 to 8,370

A

hadopelagic

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67
Q

-contain brackish water, a mixture of fresh and salt waters, located where rivers flow into the oceans

A

estuaries

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68
Q

Trap the nutrients brought in from the sea by the tides and prevent the escape of nutrients carried by the rivers

A

estuaries

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69
Q

Called as nurseries of the sea because half of all marine fishes develop in the protecetive environment of estuaries, rich in larval shrimps, mollusk and fishes

A

estuaries

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70
Q

important habitat for many vertebrates, located adjacent to estuaries

A

salt marshes

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71
Q

form in warm, shallow seas provide a haven for many invertebrates and fishes

A

coral reefs

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72
Q

shrub and tree species that live along shores, rivers, and estuaries in the tropics and subtropics

A

mangrove

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73
Q

Grows mainly in coastal saline or brackish water

A

mangrove

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74
Q

smallest environment which may include swamps, rain puddles, ponds, hot springs, lakes, streams, and rivers

A

freshwater

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75
Q

Classified into lotic system (flowing water) and lentic system (still water)

A

freshwater

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76
Q

Temperature ranges from freezing to boiling, water maybe clear or turbid with a maximum depth to 1,700 m or more

A

freshwater

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77
Q

affect the stream community

A

pH
temperature

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78
Q

richer natural waters in carbonates, bicarbonates, and associated salts supporting a more abundant aquatic life and larger fish populations than streams with acid waters

A

high pH (alkaline)

79
Q

streams shaded by trees and shrubs are cooler than those exposed to direct sunlight
➢in slow-flowing streams where current is at minimum, streamlined forms of fishes
are present such as small
-mouth bass (Micropterus dolomieu), shiners (Notropis, Cyprinell) and darters (Ethiostoma, Percina)
➢bottom-feeding fishes such as catfish are found at the silty bottom of freshwater habitats

A

freshwater

80
Q

standing water, include pond and lakes, subdivided into three zones

A

lentic

81
Q

– shallow water region with light penetration up to the bottom in lentic zone

A

littoral zone

82
Q

open water zone up to the depth of effective light penetration, photosynthetic zone (lentic zone)

A

limnetic zone

83
Q

bottom and deep water beyond the depth of effective light penetration in lentic zone

A

profundal zone

84
Q

is the interface between land and a river or stream

A

riparian region

85
Q

moving organism

A

nektons

86
Q

floating organism

A

planktons

87
Q

rooted in the lake bottom, but their leaves and stems extend out of the water

A

emergent

88
Q

those that are wholly underwater and may be rooted or unrooted.

A

submergent plants

89
Q

running water, includes rivers and streams

A

lotic zone

90
Q

shallow water where velocity is great enough to keep the bottom clear of silt and other loose materials providing a firm substrate

A

rapid zone

91
Q

deeper water where velocity of current is reduced and silt and other loose materials settle to the bottom providing a soft

A

pool zone

92
Q

two or more species compete for a resource that is in short supply

A

competition

93
Q

two species cannot coexist in a community if their niches are identical. The one with slight reproductive advantage will eliminate the other

A

competitive exclusion principle

94
Q

differences in niches that enable allopatric species to coexist (ecological niche, fundamental niche, realized niche)

A

resource partitioning

95
Q

predator eats its prey

A

predation

96
Q

acute senses (heat sensors, chemical sensors, sharp eyesight), structures (claws, teeth, fangs, poisons); speed and agility; and camouflage

A

adaptations for stalking prey

97
Q

structural (thorns, spines) or chemical (toxic or bitter taste)

A

prey or plant defenses

98
Q

cryptic coloration (Shape of animal, deceptive markings), aposematic coloration (bright coloration as a warning of toxicity)

A

passive hiding

99
Q

eats part of the plant, plants have various chemicals and mechanical defenses against herbivory, and herbivores have specialized adaptation for feeding

A

herbivory

100
Q

– the parasite derives nourishment from the host, does not usually kill the host

A

parasitism

101
Q

A realized niche refers to the wide range in which the organisms may survive in the absence of a competitor

A

False

102
Q

Which of the following biomes receives the least amount of precipitation per year?

A

desert

103
Q

__ is the other term for running water ecosystems

A

lotic

104
Q

__ is the other term for standing water ecosystems

A

lentic

105
Q

Profundal zone receives little amount of light in the lake

A

true

106
Q

Hadopelagic is the deepest zone of the oceanic region

A

true

107
Q

__ is the series of predictable changes that occur in a community over time.

A

succession

108
Q

Savanna refers to tropical grassland

A

true

109
Q

__ is the region of the oceanic province characterized by permanent darkness and inhabited by bioluminescent organisms.

A

bathypelagic

110
Q

__ is also known as the open waters, which includes all the floating and swimming organisms in the ocean/sea.

A

pelagic zone

111
Q

It is considered to be the richest biome in terms of number and abundance of species.

A

tropical rainforest forest

112
Q

__ is the ocean floor that includes the
continental shelf, continental slope and the abyssal plain.

A

benthic region

113
Q

Lotic refers to running waters

A

true

114
Q

__ is the transition between fresh water ecosystem and marine ecosystems.

A

estuary

115
Q

Supratidal is located between high tide and low tide mark

A

false

116
Q

Rapid zone of lentic waters refers to shallow water where velocity of current is high

A

false

117
Q

__ is the above high tide mark of the neritic province

A

supratidal

118
Q

Tundra is composed of coniferous forest dominated by cone-bearing trees such as spruce, fir and pine

A

false

119
Q

Which biome is nearest to the polar region?

A

tundra

120
Q

Primary succession occurs when there is no pre-existing community

A

true

121
Q

____ is the region of the oceanic province that receives abundant sunlight, where phytoplankton are abundant

A

epipelagic

122
Q

___ is the series of changes that occur in an area where no ecosystem previously existed

A

primary succession

123
Q

Desert support organisms adapted to arid conditions

A

true

124
Q

Estuaries are termed as “nurseries of the sea”

A

true

125
Q

Ponds and lakes are concrete examples of lotic freshwater bodies

A

false

126
Q

commensals benefit from the host but the host is unaffected by the relationship

A

commensalism

127
Q

refers to group of populations occupying an area at a given time

A

community

128
Q

may be based in number, biomass or basal area, and influence or position within a community

A

dominance

129
Q

relates to both the number of species ( species richness ) and the relative abundance of individuals among species ( species evenness)

A

species diversity

130
Q

species that controls the diversity of community

A

keystone species

131
Q

functional role of each species in a community

A

niche

132
Q

includes the total range of environmental conditions that are suitable for existence without the influence of interspecific competition or predation from other species

A

fundamental niche

133
Q

part of the fundamental niche actually occupied by the species.

A

realized niche

134
Q

determined by life forms of plants or vegetation

A

land

135
Q

Vertical structure in forest (5)

A

canopy
understory
shrub layer
herb layer
forest floor

136
Q

the primary site of energy fixation through photosynthesis with major influence in the forest. If the canopy is dense and closed, light levels are low and the understory and shrub layers will poorly developed

A

canopy

137
Q

consist of trees and tall shrubs lower than the canopy

A

understory

138
Q

shrubs are characterized by having woody stem

A

shrub layer

139
Q

are plants with soft green stem

A

herb layer

140
Q

nature of __ layer depend on soil moisture and nutrientcondition and
slope position

A

herb

141
Q

site where decomposition takesp lace

A

forest floor

142
Q

aquatic ecosystem determined by light penetratipn

A

photic
aphotic

143
Q

receiving sunlight

A

photic

144
Q

doesn’t receive sunlight

A

aphotic

145
Q

upper most layer receiving much sunlight, high temp

A

epilimnion

146
Q

second layer characterized by a thermocline ( steep and rapid decline in temp)

A

metalimnion

147
Q

lower cold layer

A

hypolimnion

148
Q

the upper layer contains more oxygen than the lower and bottom layer

A

amount of oxygen

149
Q

where two or more different communities meet

A

edge

150
Q

when edges are stable or permanent

A

inherent

151
Q

edge which may result from natural disturbances or human activities

A

temporary

152
Q

consist of edges and border

A

boundary

153
Q

where two or more communities not only meet but intergrade

A

ecotone

154
Q

emergent properties of a community (5)

A

scale
spatial structure
temporal structure
species richness
diversity

155
Q

is the size of a community. Provided that the area or habitat is well defined, a community can be a system of almost any size, from a drop of water, to a rotting log, to a forest, to the surface of the Pacific Ocean.

A

scale

156
Q

the way species are distributed relative to each other. Some species provide a framework that creates habitats for other species. These species, in turn create habitats for others, etc. Example: Trees in a rainforest are stratified into several different levels, including a canopy, several understories, a ground level, and roots. Each level is the habitat of a distinct collection of Some places, such as the pools of water that collect at the base of tree branches, may harbor entire communities of their own.

A

spatial structure

157
Q

is the timing of the appearance and activity of species. Some communities, i.e., arctic tundra and the decay of a corpse, have pronounced
temporal species, other communities have less.Example: Many desert plants and animals are dormant most of the year. They emerge, or germinate, in response to seasonal rains. Other plants stick around year round, having evolved adaptations to resist drought.

A

temporal structure

158
Q

is the number of species in a community. Clearly, the number of species we can observe is function of the area of the sample. It also is a function of who is looking. Thus, species richness is sensitive to sampling procedure

A

species richness

159
Q

is the number of species in the community, and their relative abundances.Species are not equally abundant, some species occur in large percentage of samples, others are poorly represented.Some communities, such as tropical rainforests, are much more diverse than others, such as the great basin desert.

A

diversity

160
Q

is often expressed using Simpson’s diversity index

A

diversity

161
Q

diversity index

A

D = 1-S (Pi)^2

162
Q

investigating community structure by grouping organisms at levels higher than the species

A

trophic level

163
Q

Community with higher diversity are

A

➢More productive and more stable regarding their productivity
➢Better able to withstand and recover from environmental stresses
➢More resistance to invasive species, organisms that become established outside their native range

164
Q

are events such as floods, fire, droughts, overgrazing, and human activity that damage communities, remove organisms from them, and alter resource availability

A

disturbances

165
Q

creates opportunities for new species to invade an area and establish themselves. These species modify the environment, and create opportunities for other species to invade. The new species eventually displace the original ones. Eventually, they modify the environment enough to allow a new series of invaders, which ultimately replace them, etc.

A

disturbances

166
Q

change involving a series of species replacement in a community following a disturbance

A

succession

167
Q

communities are constantly changing

A

non-equilibrium model

168
Q

begins in a habitat lacking soil; this might occur following a volcanic eruption.

A

primary succession

169
Q

the sequence of species on newly exposed landforms that have not previously been influenced by a community, e.g., areas exposed by glacial retreat.

A

primary succession

170
Q

begins when soil is already present but it has been disturbed and returns to a natural state, as in an abandoned cornfield.

A

secondary succession

171
Q

occurs in cases which vegetation of an area has been partially or completely removed, but where soil, seeds, and spores remain. Early in succession, species are generally excellent dispersers and good at tolerating harsh environments, but not the best interspecific competitors.

A

secondary succession

172
Q

is divided into large biogeographic units called biomes.

A

biosphere

173
Q

large biogeographic units identified mainly by their climax community

A

biomes

174
Q

as a particular mix of plants and animals adapted to live under certain environmental conditions.The average temperature and rainfall
influences where the different
biomes are found on the surface of the Earth. Climate, and mainly solar radiation and topography, is the principle determinant of the distribution of biomes.

A

biomes

175
Q

5 major kinds of biomes

A

aquatic
forest
tundra
desert
grassland

176
Q

include all watery regions of the earth

A

aquatic

177
Q

both lentic and lotic biomes including lakes and ponds and wetlands

A

freshwater

178
Q

largest biome, covering greatest amount of surface area, the open ocean

A

marine

179
Q

vary in temperature and dominated by trees

A

forest biomes

180
Q

generally dominated by deciduous trees, which shed their leaves with changing of seasons

A

temperate

181
Q

closest to the equator, marked not by the four seasons that occur in temperate forest but rather a dry and wet seasons

A

tropical

182
Q

northernmost forest biome, colder climates are dominated by coniferous trees, often on mountains

A

taiga

183
Q

frigid, treeless, and have short growing season

A

tundra biomes

184
Q

situated at high latitudes, most northern artic regions have a
permafrost ground with very small, hardy plants

A

arctic

185
Q

located at high atitudes, these biomes are marked by mountainous regions

A

apline

186
Q

are frequently found at the center of continents and are characterized by very little rainfall or available water

A

desert

187
Q

almost no plant growth

A

hot and dry

188
Q

some precipitation, may be hot or cold

A

semi-arid

189
Q

markedly unstable, prone to fog blowing in from the ocean

A

coastal desert

190
Q

dominated by tall grasses, with few shrubs or trees

A

grassland biomes

191
Q

mainly tropical grassland environment, consisting primarily of tall grasses with some shrubbery, largely known for its diverse wildlife

A

savanna

192
Q

dryer environment with tall grasses are periodically curbed by natural wildfire

A

temperate

193
Q

study table

A

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