Biology
Across
- 4. A species that is in immediate danger of becoming extinct throughout all or most of its range.
- 6. The range of different inherited traits (DNA) within a single species or population.
- 7. A species that no longer exists in a specific geographic area it once inhabited, though it still exists elsewhere.
- 10. The continuous, low-level rate of species loss that occurs naturally over long periods of time.
- 11. The application of ecological knowledge to balance the needs of wildlife populations with the needs of people.
- 13. A species that is native to and naturally found in only one specific geographic location.
- 14. A multidisciplinary science focused on protecting biodiversity and preventing the loss of species.
- 15. An organism whose presence, absence, or health provides information about the overall quality of its environment.
- 16. The variety of habitats, communities, and ecological processes within a biosphere.
Down
- 1. A species that is likely to become endangered in the foreseeable future.
- 2. The unsustainable harvesting of a renewable resource, often leading to a population collapse.
- 3. The total number of different species found in a specific community or ecosystem.
- 5. The total variety of life on Earth at all its levels, from genes to ecosystems.
- 8. An event in which a large percentage of all living species become extinct in a relatively short geological timeframe.
- 9. The study and practice of renewing and assisting the recovery of degraded or destroyed ecosystems.
- 12. A group of similar organisms capable of interbreeding and producing fertile offspring.