Ecosystems 1
Ecosystems 2
Ecosystems 3
Ecosystems 4
Ecosystems 5
100

Environments where living and non-living factors interact

Ecosystem

100

Living factors that impact an ecosystem

Biotic Factors 
100

Non-living factors that impact an ecosystem

Abiotic factors 

100

An organism that obtains energy from eating other animals 

Carnivore 

100

An organism that obtains energy from eating plants only.

Herbivore 

200

An organism which absorbs light energy from the Sun to make its own energy.

Autotroph 

200

An organism which consumes parts of other organisms (living or dead) as food

Heterotroph 

200

An organism which predators kill for food.

Prey 
200

A pathway showing the flow of energy through feeding relationships

Food chain 

200

What percentage of energy is lost at each trophic level in a food chain? 

10%

300

List 3 types of heterotrophs 

Carnivore, Herbivore, Omnivores
300

What causes energy loss between trophic levels in a food chain?

Organisms use the energy to grow, move, breathe, and keep warm.

300

A species that is integral to the health of an ecosystem.

Keystone species

300

List 3 consequences of deforestation.

More CO2 and less O2, food webs disrupted, water ways clogged, soil erosion.
300

What is the term for the loss of fertile topsoil when trees are removed and soil is eroded by wind and rain?

Soil erosion 

400

Consumes waste like the remains of plants, animals, and faecal matter

Detritivore 
400

List the four trophic levels in a food chain in order from lowest to highest.

Producer, primary consumer, secondary consumer, tertiary consumer. 

400

A change to their population size can affect every level of the food web. When this happens, it is called a?

Trophic cascade 

400

What causes the excessive growth of algae in water due to nutrient runoff from fertilisers?

Eutrophication.

400

What roles do trees play in supporting ecosystems? List at least 2.

Shelter, stabilising soil, provide source of nutrients to soil.

500

Define the term pollinator and provide one example.  

Pollinators help plants reproduce by transferring pollen between flowers. Bees or birds 

500

Repeating the same crop on the same field over and over again reduces soil quality.

Monocultures 

500

What negative effects can result from increased competition in ecosystems?

Decline in population sizes or the extinction of some species.

500

An invasive species in Australia that has had a major impact on the food web. It spreads quickly, competes with native animals for food, and poisons predators that try to eat it.  

Cane Toad 

500

Completely removing a species from
the area.

Eradication

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