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GLOSSARY
OF ECOLOGY TERMS
N to S
Our
glossary contains most of the scientific terms you'll encounter while
using this site:
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S
N
Natural
resources, n: Nutrients and minerals in the soil and deeper layers
of the earth's crust; water; wild and domestic plants and animals; air;
and other resources produced by the earth's natural processes.
Natural
selection, n: One of several gradual mechanisms through which evolution
occurs. Process by which a particular beneficial gene (or set of genes)
is reproduced more than other genes in succeeding generations due to selective
pressures in the environment that favor the beneficial gene. The result
of natural selection is a population that contains a greater proportion
of organisms better adapted to certain environmental conditions.
Negative
feedback loop, n: Situation in which a change in a certain direction
provides information that causes a system to change less in that direction.
This is a common regulatory mechanism and is widely used in animals to
control hormone levels in the blood. For example, the hormones that control
ovulation in humans are on a negative feedback loop.
Nitrogen
cycle, n: Cyclic movement of nitrogen in different chemical forms
from the environment to organisms and then back to the environment.
Nitrogen
fixation, n: The process of chemically converting nitrogen gas (N
2 ) from the air into compounds, such as nitrates (NO
3 ), nitrites (NO 2 ), or ammonia (NH
3 ), that can be used by plants in building amino acids and other
nitrogen-containing organic molecules.
Nonbiodegradable,
adj: Not able to be consumed and/or broken down by biological organisms.
Nonbiodegradable substances include plastics, aluminum, and many chemicals
used in industry and agriculture. Particularly dangerous are nonbiodegradable
chemicals that are also toxic and tend to accumulate in organisms.
Nonrenewable
resource, n: Resource that exists in a fixed amount (stock) in various
places in the earth's crust and has the potential for renewal only by
geological, physical, and chemical processes taking place over hundreds
of millions to billions of years. Examples are copper, aluminum, coal,
and oil. We classify these resources as exhaustible because we are extracting
and using them at a much faster rate than they were formed.
Nutrient,
n: Any food or element an organism must take in to live, grow, or reproduce.
Plant: An essential element in a particular ion or molecule that can be
absorbed and used by he plant. For example, carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen,
and phosphorus are essential elements; carbon dioxide, water, nitrate
(NO 3 ), and phosphate (PO
4 ) are respective nutrients. Animal: Materials such as protein,
vitamins, and minerals that are required for growth, maintenance, and
repair of the body and also materials such as carbohydrates that are required
for energy.
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O
Obligate
aerobe, n: See aerobe.
Obligate
anaerobe, n: See anaerobe.
Old-growth
forest, n: Virgin and old, second growth forests containing trees
that are often hundreds, sometimes thousands, of years old. These are
the richest forest biomes with the widest arrays of niche microhabitats
and the broadest biodiversity, especially in the tropics.
Open
system, n: A system, such as a living organism, in which both matter
and energy are exchanged between the system and the environment.
Optimum
sustainable population, n: the number of animals which will result
in the maximum productivity of the population or the species, keeping
in mind the carrying capacity of the habitat and the health of the ecosystem.
Organic,
adj: All living things, and products that are uniquely produced by living
things, such as wood, leather, and sugar. 2. All chemical compounds or
molecules, natural or synthetic, that contain carbon atoms as an integral
part of their structure.
Overburden,
n: Layer of soil and rock overlying a mineral deposit, removed during
surface mining.
Overconsumption,
n: Situation in which some people consume much more than they need at
the expense of those who can not meet their basic needs- and at the expense
of earth's present and future life-support systems for humans and other
forms of life.
Overfishing,
n: Harvesting so many fish of a species (especially immature fish) that
there is not enough breeding stock left to replenish the species, such
that it is not profitable to harvest them, leading to
commercial extinction .
Overgrazing,
n: Destruction of vegetation when too many grazing animals feed too long
and exceed the carrying capacity of a rangeland area.
Overnutrition,
n: Diet so high in calories, saturated (animal) fats, salt, sugar, and
processed foods, and so low in vegetables and fruits that the consumer
runs high risks of diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, and other health
hazards.
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P
Paleoecology,
n: The study of ancient ecosystems. Paleoecologists use data from such
sources as tree rings, geologic deposits, fossils (pollen is a particularly
popular tool), and coral bores to reconstruct the climate and ecology
or ancient ecosystems.
Phosphorus
cycle, n: Cyclic movement of phosphorus, in varying chemical forms,
from the environment to organisms and then back to the environment.
Pioneer
species, n: First hardy, often xerophytic ,
species (often microbes, mosses, and lichens) that begin colonizing a
site as the first stage of ecological succession.
Pollutant,
n: A particular chemical or form of energy that can adversely affect the
health, survival, or activities of humans or other living organisms.
Population,
n: A group within a single species, the individuals of which can and do
freely interbreed. Breeding between populations of the same species is
less common because of differences in location, culture, nationality,
and so on.
Population
change, n: An increase or decrease in the size of a population. It
is equal to (births + immigration) - (deaths + emigration).
Population
density, n: Number of organisms in a particular population found in
a specified area.
Population
dispersion, n: General pattern in which the members of a population
are arranged throughout its habitat.
Population
distribution, n: Variation of population density over a particular
geographical area. For example, a country has a high population density
in its urban areas and a much lower population density in rural areas.
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Positive
feedback loop, n: Situation in which a change in a certain direction
provides information that causes a system to change further in the same
direction. This can lead to a runaway or vicious cycle.
Potentially
renewable resource, n: Resource that theoretically can last indefinitely
without reducing the available supply, either because it is replaced more
rapidly through natural processes than are nonrenewable resources or because
it is potentially inexhaustible (solar energy). Examples are trees in
forests, grasses in grasslands, wild animals, fresh surface water in lakes
and streams, most groundwater, fresh air, and fertile soil. If such a
resource is used faster than it is replenished, it can be depleted and
converted into a nonrenewable resource.
Poverty,
n: Inability to meet basic needs for food, clothing, and shelter.
Primary
producer, n: An organism, such as a plant or microbe, that makes its
own food and forms the bottom-most tier in a trophic system. Primary producers
are the basis of the food web in most ecosystems (the exceptions are
open system communities based entirely on scavenging nutrients flushed
into the system from elsewhere, such as some deep sea communities -- though
even in these cases, the food flushed into the system comes from another
system where primary producers are the basis of the
trophic pyramid ). Primary producers are able to convert abiotic
raw materials into biotic tissue, either by capturing the sun's energy
through photosynthesis (plants) or by harnessing
the energy in chemical bonds through chemosynthesis
(some microbes).
Pyramid
of biomass, n: Diagram representing the biomass (total dry weight
of living organisms) that can be supported at each trophic level in a
food web. The bottom of the pyramid is comprised of
primary producers , while the peak of the pyramid is topped by one
(or at most a small handful) apex predator . Humans
are abnormal in that we cross all ecosystems and biomass pyramids, and
in almost every one (excepting the polar caps and deepest of oceanic environments)
we are the dominant apex predator.
Pyramid
of energy flow, n: Also called a trophic pyramid
. Diagram representing the flow of energy through each trophic level in
a food chain or food web. With each energy transfer, only a small part
(typically 10%) of the usable energy entering one trophic level is transferred
to the organisms at the next trophic level, with the remaining 90% lost
as heat or expended in metabolic processes.
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R
Resource
economics, n: The study of natural ecosystem services and the economic
values, in terms real-world currencies and capital valuations, of those
services. One of the goals of resource economics is to assist policy makers
in performing the cost-benefit analysis of various plans of action or
inaction with regard to the natural world. The value of an ecosystem service
is determined by calculating what it would cost to perform the same service
artificially if the naturally-occuring service were disrupted or destroyed.
Resource
partitioning, n: Process of dividing up resources in a ecosystem so
that species with similar requirements (overlapping ecological niches)
use the same scarce resources at different times, in different ways, or
in different places.
Runoff,
n: Surface water effluent (usually from precipitation but may be from
human activities such as irrigation) that moves too quickly to be absorbed
into the ground. It flows down contour gradients to enter stream and river
systems, carrying with it anything light enough to be borne in the volume
of water, which may be light after a small rain or tremendous in the wake
of a storm, when even large boulders and trees get swept up in the runoff.
When runoff travels over deforested or unplanted
agricultural lands, it carries away large quantities of
topsoil . Runoff from agricultural areas often carries heavy doses
of biocides , fertilizers, and other nutrients,
which can lead to eutrophication when introduced
into aquatic systems.
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S
Salinization,
n: Accumulation of salts in soil that can eventually make the soil unable
to support plant growth.
Second
law of thermodynamics, n: In any conversion of heat energy to useful
work, some of the initial energy input is always degraded to lower quality,
more dispersed, less useful energy -- usually low-temperature heat that
flows into the environment; every energy system has "leaks"
and looses energy or heat to attenuation.
Soil
Erosion, n: The loss of topsoil through silt-laden
runoff , strong winds, or other forces that transport soil away from
its natural location.
Specialist
species, n: Species with a narrow ecological niche. They may be able
to live in only one type of habitat, tolerate only a narrow range of climatic
or other environmental conditions, or they may use only one or a few types
of food.
Speciation,
n: Formation of two species from one species as a result of divergent
natural selection in response to changes in environmental conditions;
usually takes thousands or tens of thousands of years.
Species,
n: The boundaries of this taxonomic level (the most precise in the hierarchical
system of binomial nomenclature ) are hotly debated
among scientists and there is little real consensus about where to draw
the lines between species, subspecies, morphs, races, variants, etc. In
general, a species is a group of organisms that resemble one another in
appearance, general behavior, ecological niche, chemical makeup and processes,
and genetic structure. Organisms that reproduce sexually are classified
as members of the same species only if they can actually or potentially
interbreed with one another and produce fertile offspring. It should be
noted that some (though quite few) taxonomists believe the species level
of classification is frequently invalid and these scientists only recognize
classifications down to the level of genus (again, these taxonomists represent
a very small minority view).
Sulfur
cycle, n: Cyclic movement of sulfur in different chemical forms, from
the environment to organisms and then back to the environment.
Sustainability,
n: Ability of a system to survive for some specified (finite) time.
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Sustainable
agriculture, n: Method of growing crops and raising livestock based
on organic fertilizers, soil conservation, water conservation, biological
control of pests, and minimal use of non-renewable fossil-fuel energy.
Sustainable
development, n: Forms of economic development and activities that
do not deplete or degrade the natural resources upon which present and
future economic growth and life depend.
Sustainable
living, n: Taking no more potentially renewable resources from the
natural world than can be replenished naturally and not overloading the
capacity of the environment to cleanse and renew itself by natural processes.
Sustainable
society, n: A society that manages its economy and population size
without doing irreparable environmental harm by overloading the planet's
ability to absorb environmental insults, replenish its resources, and
sustain human and other forms of life over a specified period-usually
hundreds to thousands of years. During this period it satisfies the needs
of its people without depleting earth capital and thereby jeopardizing
the prospects of current and future generations of humans and other species.
Sustainable
system, n: A system that survives and functions over some specified
(finite) time; a system that attains its full expected lifetime.
Sustainable
yield (sustained yield), n: Highest rate at which a potentially renewable
resource can be used without reducing its available supply throughout
the world or in a particular area.
Symbiont,
n: See symbiosis .
Symbiosis,
n: Literally means "living together" in Latin. Any intimate
relationship or association between members of two or more species. The
members of the relationship are symbionts. Obligate symbionts rely so
heavily on the relationship that they cannot feed, reproduce, or perform
some other crucial life function in the absence of their symbiotic partner(s).
There are three main categories of symbiosis: commensalism
, mutualism , and parasitism
, with some degree of blending at the edges of these definitions in many
cases.
Symbiotic,
adj: Refers to a component or member of a system of symbiosis. "These
organisms have a symbiotic relationship."
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