Ecosystem Basics
Biomes
Energy Flow
Cycles
Species Interactions
100

What is an ecosystem?

A system of living and non-living things interacting in a specific area.

100

What is a desert?

A dry biome with low rainfall, often hot, with sparse vegetation.

100

What is the main source of energy in most ecosystems?

 The Sun.

100

Name the steps in the water cycle.

Evaporation, condensation, precipitation, infiltration, runoff.

100

What is the difference between predator and prey?

Predator hunts/eats; prey is the organism that gets eaten.

200

Define abiotic factor.

A non-living part of an ecosystem, like sunlight, water, or temperature.

200

What are the temperature and rainfall patterns of rainforests?

Warm year-round with high rainfall (over 200 cm per year).

200

What is a food web?

A diagram showing many interconnected food chains in an ecosystem.

200

What’s the carbon cycle?

Movement of carbon through atmosphere, plants, animals, and soil via photosynthesis and respiration.

200

Give an example of mutualism.

Bees pollinating flowers (both benefit).

300

What’s a niche?

The role a species plays in its environment.

300

What are the characteristics of a tundra?

Cold, dry, permafrost layer, short growing seasons, few trees.

300

 Explain the 10% rule.

Only 10% of energy is passed to the next trophic level; the rest is lost as heat.

300

What is nitrogen fixation?

When bacteria convert nitrogen gas (N₂) into ammonia or nitrates plants can use.

300

What is parasitism?

One organism benefits , the other is harmed, like a tick on a deer.

400

What is an example of a biome.

A desert, rainforest, tundra, or grassland.

400

How are marine and freshwater biomes different?

Marine = saltwater (oceans, coral reefs); 

Freshwater = lakes, rivers, ponds with low salt.

400

What are trophic levels?

Levels in a food chain: producers, primary consumers, secondary consumers, etc.

400

Why is phosphorus important?

It helps form DNA, RNA, and ATP — critical for living organisms

400

 What is an invasive species?

 A non-native species that spreads quickly and harms native species and ecosystems.

500

What are ecosystem services?

Benefits humans get from ecosystems like clean air, pollination, and water filtration.

500

How do humans impact biomes?

Through deforestation, pollution, climate change, and habitat destruction.

500

What is primary productivity?

The rate at which producers make energy through photosynthesis.

500

How do humans affect biogeochemical cycles?

Burning fossil fuels, fertilizer use, deforestation.

500

What is a keystone species?

A species that has a large impact on its ecosystem; if removed, the whole system changes

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