Cards (78)

    • Biodiversity
      The variety of living organisms
    • Carrion
      Decaying flesh and tissue of dead animals
    • Community
      Made up of the populations of different species living in a habitat
    • Competition
      The negative interaction between two or more organisms which require the same limited resource
    • Consumers
      Feed on other organisms for their energy. Can be primary, secondary or tertiary
    • Decomposers
      Organisms which feed on dead and decaying organisms. They break down the biomass and release nutrients into the soil
    • Deforestation
      The removal and destruction of trees in forest and woodland
    • Ecosystem
      The interaction between the living organisms and the different factors of the environment
    • Global warming
      The increase of the average global temperature
    • Habitat
      Where a living organism lives
    • Interdependence
      The interaction between two or more organisms, where it is mutually beneficial
    • Population
      The number of individual organisms of a single species living in a habitat
    • Predators
      Organisms which kill for food
    • Prey
      The animals which are eaten by the predators
    • Producers
      Convert the sun’s energy into useful compounds through photosynthesis. They are green plants or algae
    • Scavengers
      Organisms which feed on dead animals (carrion)
    • Species
      Organisms of similar morphology which can interbreed to produce fertile offspring
    • Abiotic factors
      • Moisture
      • Light
      • Temperature
      • CO₂
      • Wind
      • O₂
      • pH
    • Biotic factors
      • Predators
      • Competition
      • Pathogens
      • Availability of food
    • The source of all energy in a food chain is the sun’s radiation. It is made useful by plants and algae which produce organic compounds through photosynthesis
    • Living organisms use the energy to produce biomass and grow
    • When a living organism is consumed, some of the biomass and energy is transferred. Some of the energy is lost
    • The arrow in a food chain indicates the direction of the flow of energy
    • Populations of predators and prey increase and decrease in cycles. The size of the predator population depends on the size of the prey population and vice versa. Overall, there is a stable community
    • Adaptations
      Specific features of an organism which enable them to survive in the conditions of their habitat
    • Types of adaptations
      • Structural
      • Behavioural
      • Functional
    • A plant or animal will not physically change to adapt to its environment in its lifetime. Instead, there is natural variation within the species and only organisms whose features are more advantageous in the environment survive. The survivors then go on to reproduce and pass on their features to some of their offspring. The offspring who inherit these advantageous features are better equipped to survive. Charles Darwin described this process as ‘survival of the fittest’
    • Species will compete with one another and also within their own species to survive and to reproduce
    • Mutualism occurs when both species benefit from a relationship
    • Parasitism occurs when a parasite only benefits from living on the host
    • Animals compete for resources such as food, water and space/shelter. They may also compete within their own species for mates
    • Plants compete for resources including light, water, space and minerals
    • Mutualism
      Occurs when both species benefit from a relationship
    • Parasitism
      Occurs when a parasite only benefits from living on the host
    • Animals compete for resources such as
      Food, water, space/shelter
    • Animals also compete within their own species for
      Mates
    • Plants compete for resources including
      Light, water, space, minerals
    • All these resources are needed for photosynthesis so the plant can make its own food
    • Plants do not need to compete for food
    • Deforestation and Land Use