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GLOSSARY
OF ECOLOGY TERMS
Ecology
is the wide-sweaping study of the relationships between organisms and
their environments. This includes the interactions of living organisms
with one another and with their non-living surroundings, the flow of matter
and energy in environments, and the structure and functions of nature.
Many branches of enquiry
in the physical and medical sciences are subsets of this larger discipline...
seeking to understanding how components of a given system interact with
one another and why they behave the way they do.
Our
glossary contains most of the scientific terms you'll encounter while
using this site:
A
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Abiotic,
adj: Nonliving or not containing any living organisms.
Abiotic
factors, n: Environmental influences produced other than by living
organisms; for example, temperature, wind patterns, humidity, pH, substrate
rock type, and other physical and chemical influences.
Absolute
poverty, n: The lack of sufficient income in cash or exchange items
for meeting the most basic needs of food, clothing, and shelter.
Acid
fallout, n: Molecules of acid formed from reactions high in the atmosphere
involving nitrogen, sulfur oxides, and water vapor that settle out of
the atmosphere without any additional water.
Acid
precipitation, n: Includes acid rain, acid fog, acid snow, and any
other form of precipitation that is more acidic that normal (i.e., less
that pH 5.6). Excess acidity is derived from certain air pollutants, namely
sulfur dioxide and oxides of nitrogen. The effects can include: fish kills
and eutrophication of lakes; tree kills, leading
to soil erosion; and physical corrosive damage to vehicles and buildings.
Many historic buildings in Europe and the NE United States are suffering
damage from severe corrosion due to acid precipitation.
Aerobe,
n: An organism that utilizes atmospheric oxygen (0
2 ) in its metabolic pathways. An organism that must have oxygen
in order to survive is an obligate aerobe .
Aerobic,
adj: Living or occurring only in the presence of oxygen: aerobic bacteria.
2. Of or relating to aerobes, organisms that require and utilize oxygen.
3. Involving or improving oxygen consumption by the body: aerobic exercise.
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Agroforestry,
n: Production of tree crops in a manner similar to agriculture. Also,
production of trees along with regular crops.
Anaerobe,
n.: 1: An organism capable of living in the absence of free oxygen (O2
). 2: Obligate anaerobe: An organism that must
live without oxygen, for whom oxygen (O2
) is toxic.
Anaerobic,
adj.: 1: Lacking or seriously depleted of oxygen. Opposite of aerobic.
2: Of or relating to organisms, such as certain bacteria, that can live
in the absence of atmospheric oxygen (indeed, for most anaerobic bacteria,
oxygen is toxic).
Autotroph,
n: Literally, "self eater." Organisms capable of producing their
own food. See primary producers . Contrast with
heterotroph .
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B
Background
extinction rate, n: Normal rate of extinction -- as a natural part
of the evolutionary process -- of various species as a result of changes
in local environmental conditions and the actions of natural evolutionary
forces. Extinctions not caused or contributed to by the actions of humans.
Bioaccumulation,
n: An increase in the concentration of a chemical in specific organs or
tissues at a level higher than would normally be expected.
Biodegradable,
adj: Able to be broken down into simpler substances (elements and compounds)
by naturally occuring decomposers. Essentially, anything that can be ingested
by an organism without causing that organism harm. 2. Nontoxic and able
to be decomposed in relatively short period even on a
human time scale .
Biodiversity,
n: The variety of biotic factors found within a specified geographic region.
2. The combined differences of living things, generally classified in
four broad categories:
- Genetic
Diversity: Variety among individuals within a species -- or, more
specifically, the variety in the DNA of a species. See also "alleles."
- Species
Diversity: Variety of different organisms at the species taxonomic
level. See also species and
taxonomy .
- Cultural
Diversity: Variety of learned behaviors among individuals of a species.
- Ecosystem
Diversity: Variety of biomes and habitats occuring in the biosphere.
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Binomial
nomenclature, n: The two-name system, developed by Carolus Linnaeus
(the founder of modern taxonomy), used to assign scientific names to all
living things. Homo sapiens, for example, is the scientific name for humans.
The first name is the genus name and is always capitalized. This is sort
of like your last name... it belongs to several of your close relatives,
too, and it shows that you are all closely related. The second name is
the species name is always lower case. This is like your first name, which
no one else in your circle of relatives posseses and so it uniquely identifies
you. Memory tool: you probably know the meanings of the terms generic
(i.e. general, broad) and specific (i.e. precise, exact). These terms
come from the same origins as genus and species, so recalling their meaning
will help you recall the relationship between the two portions of a scientific
name.
Biome,
n: A specific type of terrestrial region inhabited by well-defined types
of life, especially zones of vegetation, that generally cannot live outside
that specific region. Examples include types of deserts ("high desert"
like the Mojave or "low desert" like the Chihuahua), grasslands
(prairies, coastal dunes), and forests (lodgepole pine vs. taiga; temperate
rain forest; bamboo forest, tropical rain forest, cloud forest, etc.).
Bionomics,
n: See ecology .
Biosphere,
n: The portion of the earth and its atmosphere in which living organisms
exist or that is capable of supporting life. 2. All of earth's ecosystems
combined into one inclusive unit. Also called the "ecosphere."
3. The living organisms and their environment composing the biosphere.
"...all life on earth and the realms that support it, from the outermost
reaches of the atmosphere to the deepest trenches of the seas." National
Geographic Atlas of the World, 6th Edition.
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C
Carrying
capacity, n: The amount of animal or plant life (or industry) that
can be supported indefinitely on available resources; the number of individuals
that the resources of a habitat can support. Also called biological carrying
capacity.
Conservation
biology, n: Multidisciplinary science created to deal with the crisis
of maintaining the genes, species, communities, and ecosystems that make
up earth's biological diversity. Its goals are to investigate human impacts
on biodiversity and to develop practical approaches to preserving biodiversity
and ecological integrity.
Conservation-tillage
farming, n: Crop cultivation in which the soil is disturbed little
(minimum-tillage farming) or not at all (no-till farming) to reduce soil
erosion, lower labor costs, and save energy.
Coral
bleaching, n: The loss of color from a coral as it expels its zooxanthellae-usually
a stress response.
Cost-benefit
analysis, n: Estimates and comparison of short-term and long-term
costs (losses) and benefits (gains) from an economic decision. If the
estimated benefits exceed the estimated costs, the decision to buy an
economic good or provide a public good is considered worthwhile.
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D
Debt-for-nature
swap, n: Agreement in which a certain amount of foreign debt is canceled
in exchange for local currency investments that will improve natural resource
management or protect certain areas in the debtor country from harmful
development.
Deforestation,
n: Removal of trees from a forested area without adequate replanting.
Demographic
transition, n: Hypothesis that countries, as they become industrialized,
have declines in death rates followed by declines in birth rates.
Desertification,
n: Conversion of rangeland, rain-fed cropland to desert-like land, with
a drop in agricultural productivity of 10% or more. It is usually caused
by a combination of overgrazing, soil erosion, prolonged drought, and
climate change.
Dioxin,
n: A synthetic, organic chemical of the chlorinated hydrocarbon class.
It is one of the most toxic compounds known to humans, having many harmful
effects, including induction of cancer and birth defects, even in extremely
minute concentrations. It has become a widespread environmental pollutant
because of the use of certain herbicides that contain dioxin as a contaminant.
Acknowledgements
Many
thanks to Troy Knott and Catherine Burr for their hard work in assisting
to compile this glossary.
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