APES Unit 1 Test Review
temperate seasonal forest
A biome with warmer summers and colder winters than temperate rainforests and dominated by deciduous trees.
negative feedback loop
A feedback loop in which a system responds to a change by returning to its original state, or by decreasing the rate at which the change is occurring.
Estuary
A habitat in which the fresh water of a river meets the salt water of the ocean.
Salinity
A measure of the amount of dissolved salts in a given amount of liquid
food chain
A series of steps in which organisms transfer energy by eating and being eaten
Tundra
An extremely cold, dry biome.
desert
An extremely dry area with little water and few plants
Taiga
Biome in which the winters are cold but summers are mild enough to allow the ground to thaw
biomass pyramid
Diagram representing the biomass in each trophic level of an ecosystem
1st law of thermodynamics
Energy cannot be created or destroyed
2nd law of thermodynamics
Every energy transfer or transformation increases the entropy of the universe.
Niche
Full range of physical and biological conditions in which an organism lives and the way in which the organism uses those conditions
10% rule
Only 10% of the total energy produced at each trophic level is available to the next level. The amount of energy passed up to the levels of the food pyramid reduces as you go up.
resource partitioning
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
fundamental niche
The niche species could potentially occupy.
Shrubland (Chaparral)
a biome; is characterized by hot, dry summers and mild, rainy winters
tropical rainforest
a broadleaf evergreen forest found in wet and hot regions near the equator.
Symbiosis
a close and long term interaction between two species in an ecosystem
temperate rainforest
a coastal biome typified by moderate temperatures and high precipitation
Savannah
a flat grassland in tropical or subtropical regions
food web
a system of interlocking and interdependent food chains.
Climatographs
a visual representation of a region's average monthly temperature and precipitation
dimmensional analysis
allows conversion between units
temperate grassland
biome characterized by deep, nutrient-rich soil that supports many grass species
100m is the clearest water
blue light only penetrates
validity and accuracy
controlled experiments increase
open ocean
deep ocean water, located away from the shoreline where sunlight can no longer reach the ocean bottom
aquatic producers
diatoms, phytoplankton, algae, bacteria
positive and negative feedback loops
every aspect of nature is maintained through
sunlight, temperature, precipitation, nutrient availability, carbon dioxide levels
factors affecting primary productivity
positive feedback loop
feedback loop that causes a system to change further in the same direction
streams, rivers, ponds, open ocean, estuaries, coral reefs, freshwater lakes, wetlands
major aquatic biomes
tundra, desert, taiga, temperate rainforests, shrubland, temperate grassland, savannah
major terrestrial biomes
temperate
mild, moderate
upper 1m of water
most red light is absorbed in
biogeochemical cycle
process in which elements, chemical compounds, and other forms of matter are passed from one organism to another and from one part of the biosphere to another
NPP=GPP-R
productivity equation
Units of Energy Per Unit Area Per Unit Time
productivity is measured in
numbers pyramid
shows how many organisms are needed at each trophic level
tragedy of the commons
suggests that individuals will use shared resources in their own self-interest rather than in keeping with the common good, thereby depleting the resources
conservation of matter
the principle stating that matter is not created or destroyed during a chemical reaction
realized niche
the range of abiotic and biotic conditions under which a species actually lives
primary productivity
the rate at which solar energy (sunlight) is converted into organic compounds via photosynthesis over a unit of time
respiration rate
the rate of carbon dioxide production from a given amount of produce over a certain unit of time (R)
gross primary productivity
the total rate of photosynthesis in a given area
net primary productivity
the total rate of photosynthesis in a given area, after subtracting the energy lost to respiration
Biomass
total amount of living tissue within a given trophic level