DEFINITIONS
CYCLES
BIOMES
HISTORY
WILDCARD
100

The study of the interactions between living and nonliving things?

Ecology

100

The water droplet is warmed by the sun, it evaporates and rises, as it rises it cools, condenses and forms a cloud,  It will eventually be precipitated as rain, snow, etc back to the Earth where it will enter a river, lake, or ocean as surface runoff.  Or it may seep into the groundwater that is absorbed by plants and released again into the atmosphere through transpiration.

Water cycle OYO 3.8 p. 97

100

What two larger biome categories have ecologists identified (they place the other biome sub categories in these two main categories)? p 112

Terrestrial (or land) biomes & Aquatic (or water biomes)

100

Thomas Austin imported 24 rabbits and released them on his property in Australia. Six years later, he had more than 10,000 rabbits (even after he claimed to have killed 20,000 rabbits!) destroying his grasslands and keeping his sheep from getting the grass they needed. This is an example of __________ species.

This is an example of an invasive species in the 1920's in Australia

100

What is a relationship between two organisms of different species where one benefits and the other is harmed called?

Parasitism

200

The association of living organisms and their physical environment

Ecosystem

200

The process by which oxygen is removed from the air and restored to the air. (Organisms use the oxygen from the air as part of their respiration, human fires use up oxygen, rusting of metals uses up a percentage of oxygen, and some oxygen in the atmosphere is converted to ozone that protects the Earth from harmful rays. Luckily, oxygen is restored to the air through photosynthesis of plants on land and phytoplankton in the ocean. p. 105-106

The Oxygen Cycle

200

What type of terrestrial biome is wet and warm year-round temperatures?  (The rainfall is often more than 100 inches per year!) p. 114

Tropical Rainforest

200

What was introduced into the Yellowstone National Park in 1995-1997 that eventually changed the course of the rivers?

Wolves

200

What uses carbon dioxide and produces oxygen via photosynthesis as they make food for themselves (glucose)?

Producers (phytoplankton & plants) 🌱

300

The measure of the total amount of living tissue of organisms within a trophic level in an ecosystem

Biomass

300

Atmospheric nitrogen is used by plants and animals (it is an essential part of amino acids, DNA, and RNA).  Nitrogen-fixing bacteria living in soil add hydrogen to the nitrogen changing it from Nto NHso that many plants can use the nitrogen/ammonia.  Other nitrifying bacteria break down ammonia into nitrates/nitrites. Primary consumers (animals) eat the plants getting their nitrogen from plants.  Carnivores eat animals that have eaten the plants to get their nitrogen. Some of the nitrogen is excreted the rest is broken down back into the soil by decomposers after it dies!

the Nitrogen Cycle p. 107-108

300

Biomes are ___________ mainly by climate, which includes the abiotic factors- temperature range and precipitation level.

classified (On Your Own Question 3.14 p. 113) 

300

Prior to the industrial revolution (1840-1870), humans didn't burn a lot of fossil fuels so their contribution to global COlevels was insignificant, but records show the C02 levels and the surface temperature of the Earth were sometimes higher than today!  What does this tell us about global warming today?

There might be other causes to global warming than human contribution through the burning of fossil fuels.

300

What is found anywhere the ocean meets fresh water? p. 117

Estuaries

400

The process by which certain gasses (principally water vapor, carbon dioxide, and methane) trap heat that would otherwise escape Earth and radiate into space

Greenhouse effect

400

The Phosphorus is found in rocks and is released through weathering and erosion.  As the rocks erode, water dissolves the phosphorus and carries it to lakes, streams, rivers, and oceans. Once in water, the phosphorous combines with oxygen to form phosphates. Just like in the carbon and nitrogen cycles, phosphorus is passed through the food chain (it is returned through animal waste and decay).

The Phosphorus Cycle

400

What is a subarctic biome with below-freezing temperatures for six months of the year? (Not many plant specifies grow in the taiga, conifer/evergreen trees are the dominant plant life.  Rabbits, squirrels, lynx, and bobcats are some of the animals that live in this biome.) p. 115

Taiga or Boreal Forest

400

There is historic evidence of ___________or written histories of the times by Plato, Aristotle, and Roman scribes. There is also evidence found in ice cores, sediment samples of the ocean and lake floors, tree growth rings, and fossilized pollen analysis.

What climate was like before the 1800s. p. 103

400

What is the topmost layer of water nearest the shore is called that is submerged by water part of the day depending on the tide? p. 118

Littoral Zone

500

A relationship between two or more organisms of a different species where ALL benefit from the association called

Mutualism

500

The movement of carbon atoms between organic and inorganic molecules in the biosphere when carbon dioxide enters the air through volcanoes, decomposition of dead organic matter, respiration of animals, or combustion reactions (burning).  It is taken from the air by photosynthesis or dissolved into the ocean.

Carbon Cycle

500

Aquatic biomes are divided into ____________ based on factors such as water depth and the amount of sunlight available for photosynthesis.

zones (OYO 3.16 p. 119)

500

In 1980, Mount St. Helens violently erupted, leveling tens of thousands of acres of land and killing millions of animals. In 1988, thousands of acres of Yellowstone National Park were altered by fire. In 2005 Hurricane Katrina and Rita devastated the coastal wetlands of Lousiana.  Natural disturbances such as storms, floods, droughts, fires, volcanic eruptions affect communities by changing habitats and destroying organisms. 

Some historical examples of ecological succession  p. 124

500

An organism's role in an ecosystem, including it's habitat, physical requirements (such as light, water, food sources), the time of day it's active, its place on the food change, and when and how it reproduces.

A species' niche

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