Trophic Cascade--Ecology
Herbivore (Primary Consumer)
A consumer that eats plants for energy
trophic cascade
A series of changes in the population sizes of organisms at different trophic levels in a food chain, occurring when predators at high trophic levels indirectly promote populations of organisms at low trophic levels by keeping species at intermediate trophic levels in check. Trophic cascades may become apparent when a top predator is eliminated from a system.
keystone species
A species that influences the survival of many other species in an ecosystem
teriary consumer
An organism that eats secondary consumers
Ecology
Scientific study of interactions among organisms and between organisms and their environment
predation and herbivory
a +/- interaction between species in which one species, the predator, kills and eats the other, the prey
direct effect
an interaction between two species that does not involve other species
indirect effect
an interaction between two species that involves one or more intermediate species
indirect commensalism
an interaction in which one species benefits another species indirectly, through an intermediary species, without itself being helped or harmed
Mutualism (+/+)
both species benefit from the interaction
ecological pyramid
diagram that shows the relative amounts of energy or matter within each trophic level in a food chain or food web
competition exclusion principle
no two species can occupy the same niche in the same habitat at the same time
secondary consumers (carnivores)
obtain their energy by eating primary consumers
predation/parasitism
one species benefits and the other is harmed or affected
exploitation competition
organisms compete indirectly through the consumption of a limited resource
apex predator (ecology)
predators with few to no predators of their own