Sections
                          Key Terms
                      Key Terms
- acid rain
 - corrosive rain caused by rainwater falling to the ground through sulfur dioxide gas, turning it into weak sulfuric acid; can damage structures and ecosystems
 
- analytical model
 - ecosystem model that is created with mathematical formulas to predict the effects of environmental disturbances on ecosystem structure and dynamics
 
- apex consumer
 - organism at the top of the food chain
 
- assimilation
 - biomass consumed and assimilated from the previous trophic level after accounting for the energy lost due to incomplete ingestion of food, energy used for respiration, and energy lost as waste
 
- biogeochemical cycle
 - cycling of mineral nutrients through ecosystems and through the non-living world
 
- biomagnification
 - increasing concentrations of persistent, toxic substances in organisms at each trophic level, from the primary producers to the apex consumers
 
- biomass
 - total weight, at the time of measurement, of living or previously living organisms in a unit area within a trophic level
 
- chemoautotroph
 - organism capable of synthesizing its own food using energy from inorganic molecules
 
- conceptual model
 - (also, compartment models) ecosystem model that consists of flow charts that show the interactions of different compartments of the living and non-living components of the ecosystem
 
- dead zone
 - area within an ecosystem in lakes and near the mouths of rivers where large areas of ecosystems are depleted of their normal flora and fauna; these zones can be caused by eutrophication, oil spills, dumping of toxic chemicals, and other human activities
 
- detrital food web
 - type of food web in which the primary consumers consist of decomposers; these are often associated with grazing food webs within the same ecosystem
 
- ecological pyramid
 - (also, Eltonian pyramid) graphical representation of different trophic levels in an ecosystem based of organism numbers, biomass, or energy content
 
- ecosystem
 - community of living organisms and their interactions with their abiotic environment
 
- ecosystem dynamics
 - study of the changes in ecosystem structure caused by changes in the environment or internal forces
 
- equilibrium
 - steady state of an ecosystem where all organisms are in balance with their environment and each other
 
- eutrophication
 - process whereby nutrient runoff causes the excess growth of microorganisms, depleting dissolved oxygen levels and killing ecosystem fauna
 
- fallout
 - direct deposit of solid minerals on land or in the ocean from the atmosphere
 
- food chain
 - linear representation of a chain of primary producers, primary consumers, and higher-level consumers used to describe ecosystem structure and dynamics
 
- food web
 - graphic representation of a holistic, non-linear web of primary producers, primary consumers, and higher-level consumers used to describe ecosystem structure and dynamics
 
- grazing food web
 - type of food web in which the primary producers are either plants on land or phytoplankton in the water; often associated with a detrital food web within the same ecosystem
 
- gross primary productivity
 - rate at which photosynthetic primary producers incorporate energy from the sun
 
- holistic ecosystem model
 - study that attempts to quantify the composition, interactions, and dynamics of entire ecosystems; often limited by economic and logistical difficulties, depending on the ecosystem
 
- hydrosphere
 - area of the Earth where water movement and storage occurs
 
- mesocosm
 - portion of a natural ecosystem to be used for experiments
 
- microcosm
 - re-creation of natural ecosystems entirely in a laboratory environment to be used for experiments
 
- net consumer productivity
 - energy content available to the organisms of the next trophic level
 
- net primary productivity
 - energy that remains in the primary producers after accounting for the organisms’ respiration and heat loss
 
- net production efficiency (NPE)
 - measure of the ability of a trophic level to convert the energy it receives from the previous trophic level into biomass
 
- non-renewable resource
 - resource, such as fossil fuel, that is either regenerated very slowly or not at all
 
- primary consumer
 - trophic level that obtains its energy from the primary producers of an ecosystem
 
- primary producer
 - trophic level that obtains its energy from sunlight, inorganic chemicals, or dead and/or decaying organic material
 
- residence time
 - measure of the average time an individual water molecule stays in a particular reservoir
 
- resilience (ecological)
 - speed at which an ecosystem recovers equilibrium after being disturbed
 
- resistance (ecological)
 - ability of an ecosystem to remain at equilibrium in spite of disturbances
 
- secondary consumer
 - usually a carnivore that eat primary consumers
 
- simulation model
 - ecosystem model that is created with computer programs to holistically model ecosystems and to predict the effects of environmental disturbances on ecosystem structure and dynamics
 
- subduction
 - movement of one tectonic plate beneath another
 
- tertiary consumer
 - carnivore that eat other carnivores
 
- trophic level
 - position of a species or group of species in a food chain or a food web
 
- trophic level transfer efficiency (TLTE)
 - energy transfer efficiency between two successive trophic levels