enFICamp Cuyamaca crossword18
Adaptation: a characteristic (physical or behavioral) that improves an organism's chance for survival in a particular habitat
Biodegradable: readily decomposing by natural biological processes
Carrying Capacity: the total number of animals a given area is able to support
Community: a group of living things which are generally found together within an ecosystem
Consumer: an organism that feeds on living materials. It can make its own food.
Cycle: series of continuous changes which return to a starting point
Diurnal: most active during the day
Endangered Species: those plants and animals that are in danger of becoming extinct
Energy: the ability to do work
Environment: everything that surrounds Ian organism including living (biotic) and non living (abiotic) matter
Erosion: the wearing away of earth or rock by various agents or forces, particularly water and air
Ethics: a personal or social moral code
Fault: a break in the earth's crust where one side moves against the other, resulting in an earthquake
Food chain: the passage of chemical energy (food) from producers to consumers
Food web: a system of interconnecting food chains
Habitat: the arrangement of food, water, shelter, and space suitable to an organism's needs
Invertebrates: those animals without a backbone including annelids, arachnids, crustaceans, insects and molhusks
Kumeyaay: tribe of Indians who roamed from coast to deserts
Camp Cuyamaca crossword
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a personal or social moral code
the total number of animals a given area is able to support
a characteristic (physical or behavioral) that improves an organism's chance for survival in a particular habitat
the wearing away of earth or rock by various agents or forces, particularly water and air
those animals without a backbone including annelids, arachnids, crustaceans, insects and molhusks
the passage of chemical energy (food) from producers to consumers
readily decomposing by natural biological processes
most active during the day
the ability to do work
an organism that feeds on living materials. It can make its own food.
everything that surrounds Ian organism including living (biotic) and non living (abiotic) matter
series of continuous changes which return to a starting point
a break in the earth's crust where one side moves against the other, resulting in an earthquake
the arrangement of food, water, shelter, and space suitable to an organism's needs
tribe of Indians who roamed from coast to deserts
those plants and animals that are in danger of becoming extinct
a system of interconnecting food chains
a group of living things which are generally found together within an ecosystem