Across
- 3. The increase in toxin concentration as it moves up successive trophic levels.
- 4. The process where nutrients are washed out of the soil by rainwater, often into water bodies.
- 5. Strips of habitat connecting fragmented populations to allow for movement and genetic exchange.
- 7. Nutrient enrichment of water causing algal blooms and oxygen depletion.
- 9. A species that has a disproportionately large effect on its environment relative to its abundance.
- 10. The variety of life in the world or in a particular habitat or ecosystem.
- 11. The clearing of forests which leads to habitat loss and increased atmospheric carbon.
Down
- 1. The ability of an ecosystem to maintain its biological processes and biodiversity over a long period.
- 2. A famous New Zealand example of ecological restoration through natural regeneration of native forest.
- 6. An experimental tool that allows for the control and manipulation of variables in a small ecosystem.
- 8. The critical threshold at which a small change can push an ecosystem into a different state.
- 12. Environmental impacts or changes caused specifically by human activity.
