What is an ecosystem?
The living and the non living parts of an environment and the interrelationships that exist between them eg a pond
What are Biomes?
Global scale ecosystems eg a tropical rainforest
What are adaptions?
The ways that plants evolve to cope with environmental conditions such as lots of rainfal
What are producers?
Organisms that get their energy from a primary source such as the sun.
What are consumers?
Organisms that get their energy by eating other organisms.
What is a food chain?
A line of linkages between producers and consumers.
What is a food web?
A diagram thats shows all the linkages between producers and consumers in an ecosystem.
What are scavengers?
Organisms that consume dead animals or plants.
What are decomposers?
Organisms such as bacteria that break down plant and animal material.
What is nutrient cycling?
The recycling of nutrients between living organisms and the environment.
Impacts of change in a freshwater pond
Characteristics of the vegetation in Temperate deciduous woodlands
*Common soil found is a brown soil
Adaptions in the deciduous woodlands
What is stratification?
The four layers of the woodlands:
Describe temperate deciduous forests
Characteristics of the vegetation in Temperate deciduous woodlands
*Common soil found is a brown soil
Adaptions in the deciduous woodlands
What is stratification?
The four layers of the woodlands:
Case study for deciduous woodland- facts about EPPING FOREST
Size: 19km long, 4km wide. It covers an area of 2,500 ha
Location: Runs north-east of London on a high gravel ridge.
Vegetation: 70% woodland (mostly beech trees) including grassland and marshes.
History on Epping forest
What is the legal protection in Epping forest?
In 1878 the Epping forest act of parliament stated the “the conservators shall at all times keep Epping forest unenclosed and unbuilt on as an open space for the recreation and enjoyment of the people”
Give an example of sustainable management in Epping Forrest
What is pollarding?
Cutting trees at shoulder height and the level of the grazing animals. Pollarded trees reshoot at this height producing new wood and ensuring a supply of wood for generations.
What are the commercial uses of the Epping forest?