ecosystem
noun
                                                                                                                            
                                                            eco·sys·tem
                    
                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                  ˈē-kō-ˌsi-stəm  
                                                                                                                              
            ˈe-kō-
                                                      
                                                          
            
               plural ecosystems            
        
    1
                    
                                          
              
          
                                                      : the complex of a community of organisms and its environment functioning as an ecological unit                                      
              
                             
That influx of fresh water alters the ocean's salinity near the seafloor, a factor that influences the makeup of the ecosystems in those places.— Sid Perkins
Sid Perkins
                                       Global warming, if it proceeds as many scientists predict, threatens to undo decades of conservation work and could mean the destruction of the monarch butterfly, the edelweiss, the polar bear and innumerable other species living in fragile ecosystems, an emerging body of scientific evidence suggests.— William K. Stevens
William K. Stevens
                         
                
                    2
                    
                                          
              
          
                                                      : something (such as a network of businesses) considered to resemble an ecological ecosystem especially because of its complex interdependent parts                                      
              
                             
Newspaper layoffs have ripple effects for the entire local news ecosystem because, as the Congressional Research Service noted, television, radio and online outlets often "piggyback on reporting done by much larger newspaper staffs."— David Sirota
David Sirota
                                       Lots of Walmart customers are underserved by banks and other financial institutions, [Daniel] Eckert says; the company's experiments with finance-related products and services help customers "not only save money but also have access to a financial ecosystem they were crowded out from."— Rob Walker
Rob Walker
                         
                
                    
                                                      ecosystemic
                        
                        
                        
    
                                                                          ˌē-kō-si-ˈste-mik  
                                                                      
                                      adjective
                                                                                                                                  
ˌe-kō-
                          
          
         
                        The Amazon invariably evokes superlatives and often hyperbole. Stock images such as river dimensions and biotic variety are now joined with notions of forest biomass and ecosystemic complexity.    
        
        
            — Kent Mathewson
Kent Mathewson          
  
                  
          
         
                        The women of Sex and the City occasionally argued, sure, but their ecosystemic purpose—to be there for their friends as they date and search and marry—was always extremely clear.    
        
        
            — Megan Garber
Megan Garber          
  
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  Merriam-Webster unabridged




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