Ecology
Across
- 3. A behavior in which an animal defends a bounded physical space against encroachment by other individuals, usually of its own species.
- 6. The total mass of organic matter comprising a group of organisms in a particular habitat.
- 7. An herbivore; an organism that eats plants or other autotrophs.
- 10. An area containing several different ecosystems linked by exchanges of energy, materials, and organisms.
- 11. A species that is not necessarily abundant in a community yet exerts strong control on community structure by the nature of its ecological role or niche.
- 13. Referring to any characteristic that varies according to an increase in population density.
- 14. The pathway along which food energy is transferred from trophic level to trophic level, beginning with producers.
- 16. Dead organic matter.
- 17. The amount of added nutrient, usually nitrogen or phosphorus, that can be absorbed by plants without damaging ecosystem integrity.
- 18. The integrated study of ecology, evolutionary biology, physiology, molecular biology, and genetics to sustain biological diversity at all levels.
- 20. A function performed by an ecosystem that directly or indirectly benefits humans.
Down
- 1. A group of individuals of the same age in a population.
- 2. A parasite that feeds on the external surface of a host.
- 4. Reproduction in which adults produce offspring over many years; also known as iteroparity.
- 5. A permanently frozen soil layer.
- 8. A species that has a positive effect on the survival and reproduction of other species in a community and that influences community structure.
- 9. An element that must be added for production to increase in a particular area.
- 12. The warming of Earth due to the atmospheric accumulation of carbon dioxide and certain other gases, which absorb reflected infrared radiation and reradiate some of it back toward Earth.
- 15. The part of the ocean’s benthic zone between 2,000 and 6,000 m deep.
- 19. The entire portion of Earth inhabited by life; the sum of all the planet’s ecosystems.
- 21. The area where a freshwater stream or river merges with the ocean.