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BIOSPHERE Chapter 3 VOCAB ONLY. http://educ.queensu.ca/~fmc/august2004/pages/dinobreath.html. Symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits by living on or inside another which is harmed. parasitism. Principle that states no 2 organisms can occupy the same niche in the same
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BIOSPHEREChapter 3VOCAB ONLY http://educ.queensu.ca/~fmc/august2004/pages/dinobreath.html
Symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits by living on or inside another which is harmed parasitism Principle that states no 2 organisms can occupy the same niche in the same habitat at the same time. Competitive exclusion principle
Symbiotic relationship in which both organisms benefit from their close association mutualism An “organism’s job” that includes what it eats, what eats it, where in the habitat it lives, how it acts, and when & how it reproduces? niche
Symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits but the other is neither harmed nor helped commensalism The scientific study of interactions between organisms and between organisms and their environment ecology
The portion of the Earth in which all life exists biosphere Organism that captures and eats another predator
species Group of organisms so similar that they can breed and produce fertile offspring An organism that is captured and eaten by another prey
population A group of individuals that belong to the same species that live together in an area Another name for heterotrophs consumers
Group of different populations that live together in an area community All the living things an ecosystem that an organism might interact with Biotic factors
All the organisms that live in a place PLUS their non-living environment ecosystem Another name for autotrophs producers
Organisms that can make their own food using energy from sunlight or chemical bonds in inorganic compounds autotrophs or producers All the non-living things such as climate, temperature, weather, soil type, or sunlight in an ecosystem that impact an organism Abiotic factors
Organism that can’t make its own food and get energy from consuming other organisms heterotrophs or consumers Any relationship in which two species live closely together symbiosis
Rate at which organic matter is created by producers Primary productivity Chemical substance organisms needto sustain life nutrient
Process in which green plants use energy from sunlight to produce carbohydrates photosynthesis A living thing organism
Process in which some bacteria use energy stored in the chemical bonds of inorganic compounds to make carbohydrates in the absence of light chemosynthesis Series of steps in which organisms transfer energy through an ecosystem by eating and being eaten Food chain
Interaction in which one organism captures and feeds on another. predation Network of complex interactions linking all the food chains in an ecosystem food web
herbivore Organism that eats only plants Process in which elements, chemical compounds, and other forms of matter are passed from part of the biosphere to another Biogeochemical cycle
carnivore Organism that eats only meat Process in which liquid water changes into a gas evaporation
omnivore Organism that eats both plants and meat Process in which water from plant leaves evaporates into the atmosphere transpiration
Organism such as mites, snail, earthworms, or crabs that eat dead plants or animals detritivore Process in which bacteria in soil convert nitrogen gas into ammonia Nitrogen fixation
decomposers Organism such as bacteria or fungi that break down organic matter Each step in a food chain or web trophic level
denitrification Process in which bacteria covert nitrates into nitrogen gas and released into atmosphere Nutrient which is scare or cycles slowly that controls population growth Limiting nutrient
Any necessity for life such as water, food, light, or space resource Relationship in which organismsattempt to use the same resource at the same time and place competition