Graphs & Data
Food Webs
Symbiosis
Population Changes
Levels of Organization
100

This means a population line is going up.

What is increasing?

100

An animal that hunts and eats another animal.

 What is a predator?

100

Both organisms benefit.

What is mutualism?

100

When more individuals are born than die, the population does this.

What is increase?

100

One single living thing.

 What is an organism?

200

This means a population stays about the same over time.

What is stable population?

200

An animal that gets eaten.

What is prey?

200

One benefits, one is harmed.

What is parasitism?

200

When resources are limited, populations tend to do this.

What is decrease?

200

A group of the same species in one area.

What is a population?

300

What tool helps you compare numbers in rows and columns?

What is a data table?

300

What does an arrow in a food web show?

What is energy flow (who eats whom)?

300

One benefits, the other is unaffected.

What is commensalism?

300

If rabbits increase, what happens to foxes?

What is increase?

300

All living and nonliving things in an area.

What is an ecosystem?

400

If a graph line goes down, what is happening to the population?

What is decreasing?

400

If two animals eat the same food, what are they doing?

What is competing?

400

A tick feeding on a dog is an example of this.

What is parasitism?

400

Name one resource organisms compete for.

What is food, water, space, or shelter?

400

Put these in order: organism, population, community

What is organism → population → community?

500

Why do scientists use graphs?

What is to show and interpret data easily?

500

What happens to predators if prey decreases?

What is predators decrease?

500

Clownfish and sea anemone relationship.

What is mutualism?

500

How can one population affect another?

What is through predator-prey relationships or competition?

500

Largest level of organization.

What is the biosphere?

M
e
n
u