ESS Key Terms and Definitions
ESS Key Terms and Definitions
ESS Key Terms and Definitions
Ecosystem
A community of interdependent organisms and the physical
environment they inhabit.
Entropy
A measure of the amount of disorder, chaos or randomness
in a system; the greater the disorder, the higher the level
of entropy.
Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA)
A method of detailed survey required, in many countries,
before a major development. Ideally it should be
independent of, but paid for by, the developer. Such a
survey should include a baseline study to measure
environmental conditions before development commences,
and to identify areas and species of conservation
importance.
Equilibrium
A state of balance among the components of a system.
Eutrophication
The natural or artificial enrichment of a body of water,
particularly with respect to nitrates and phosphates, that
result in depletion of the oxygen content of the water.
Eutrophication is accelerated by human activities that add
detergents, sewage or agricultural fertilizers to bodies of
water.
Evolution
The cumulative, gradual change in the genetic
characteristics of successive generations of a species or
race of an organism, ultimately giving rise to species or
races different from the common ancestor. Evolution
reflects changes in the genetic composition of a population
over time.
Feedback
The return of part of the output from a system as input, so
as to affect succeeding outputs.
Fertility
In the context of human populations, this refers to the
potential for reproduction exhibited in a population. It may
be measured as fertility rate, which is the number of births
per thousand women of child- bearing age. Alternatively it
may be measured as total fertility, which is simply the
average number of children a women has in her lifetime.
Gaia
Hypothesis developed by James Lovelock and named after
an ancient Greek Earth goddess. It compares the Earth to a
living organism in which feedback mechanisms maintain
equilibrium.
Genetic Diversity
Isolation
The process by which 2 populations become separated by
geographical, behavioral, genetic ore reproductive factors.
If gene flow between the 2 subpopulations is prevented,
new species may evolve.
K- Strategist
Open System
A system in which both matter and energy are exchanged
with its surroundings.
Parasitism
A relationship between 2 species in which one species lives
in or on another, gaining all or much of its food from it.
Plate Tectonics
The movement of the 8 major and several minor internally
rigid plates of the Earth's lithosphere in relation to each
other and to the partially mobile asthenosphere below.
Point Source Pollution
The release of pollutants from a single, clearly identifiable
site; i.e. a factory chimney
Pollution
The addition to an environment of a substance or an agent
(such as heat) by human activity, at a rate greater than
that at which it can be rendered harmless by the
environment, and which has an appreciable effect on the
organism within it.
Population
A group of organisms of the same species living in the
same area at the same time, and which are capable of
interbreeding.
Positive Feedback
Feedback that amplifies or increases change; it leads to
exponential deviation away from an equilibrium.
Primary Productivity
The gain by producers in energy or biomass per unit area
per unit time. Can refer to either net or gross productivity.
Rate of Natural Increase
The form in which human population growth rates are
usually expressed:
crude birth rate- crude death rate/ 10
(inward and outward migration are ignored)
Replenishable Natural Capital
Non-living natural resources that depend on the energy of
the Sun for their replenishment; i.e. groundwater.
R- Strategist
Species that tend to spread their reproductive investment
among a large number of offspring so that they are well
adapted to colonize new habitats rapidly and make
opportunistic use of short- lived resources.
Secondary Productivity
The biomass gained by heterotrophic organisms, through
feeding and absorption, measured in units of mass or
energy per unit area per unit time.
Sere
The set of communities that succeed one another over the
course of succession at a given location.
Smog
The tern now used for any haziness in the atmosphere
caused by air pollutants.
Society
An arbitrary group of individuals who share some common
characteristics such as geographical location, cultural
background, historical time frame, religious perspective,
value system, etc,
Soil
A mixture of mineral particles and organic material that
covers the land, and in which terrestrial plants grow.
Soil Profile
A vertical section through a soil , from the surface down to
the parent material, revealing the soil layers of horizons.
Speciation
The process through which new species form.
Species
A group of organisms that interbreed and produce fertile
offspring.
Species Diversity
The variety of species per unit area. This includes both the
number of species present and their relative abundance.
Stable Equilibrium
The condition of a system in which there is a tendency for
it to return to a previous equilibrium condition following
disturbance.
Steady- State Equilibrium
The condition of an open system in which there are no
changes over the longer term, but in which there may be
oscillations in the very short term. There are continuing
inputs and outputs of matter and energy, but the system
as a whole remains in a more or less constant state.
Succession
The orderly process of change over time in a community.
Changes in the community of organisms frequently cause
changes in the physical environment that allow another
community to become established and replace the former
through competition.
Sustainability
Use of global resources at a rate that allows natural
regeneration and minimizes damage to the environment.
System
An assemblage of parts and the relationship between
them, which together constitute an entity or whole.
Trophic Level
The position that an organism occupies in a food chain, or a
group of organisms in a community that occupy the same
position in food chains.
Zonation
The arrangement or patterning of plant communities or
ecosystems into parallel or sub- parallel bands in response
to change, over a distance, in some environmental factor.