Biodiversity Basics
Classification & Taxonomy
Kingdoms of Life
Producers, Consumers, & Decomposers
Ecosystems & Human Impact
100

What is the variety of life and organisms in a habitat or ecosystem called?

Biodiversity

100

The science of naming and classifying living things is called what?

Taxonomy

100

How many kingdoms of life are there?

Five

100

In a food chain, where does energy always start?


The Sun.



100

What is the largest ecosystem on Earth?

Ocean Ecosystem

200

The closer a region is to the equator, the _______ the biodiversity.

greater

200

What are the eight levels of classification in order?

Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species.

200

Name the five kingdoms.

animal, plant, protist, monera, and fungi.

200

Explain what producers and consumers are.

Producers: can create their own food (through photosynthesis).

Consumers: cannot create their own food (rely on nutrients from other living things).

200

Give the factors that influence ecosystems.

What are air, water, trees, plants, or animals?

300

What type of region has the most biodiversity.

Tropical

300

What is the saying to help remember the classification order?

“Dear King Philip Came Over For Good Soup”

300

Animals with a backbone are called what?

Vertebrates

300

Describe what Protista, Monera and Fungi are. Give an example of each.

Protista: usually single-celled organisms that live in water or other moist places (eg. parasites)                       

Monera: single-celled organisms that have no nucleus and are the simplest and oldest forms of life (eg. bacteria)

Fungi: decomposers who return bacteria back to the Earth by feeding off dead plants and animals.

300

What is an invasive species?

A non-native species introduced that harms the ecosystem.

400

What does it mean that all species are interconnected?

They depend on each other for survival.

400

What two levels make up an organism’s scientific name?

Genus and Species

400

Animals without a backbone are called what?

Invertebrates

400

Explain the three types of consumers.

Herbivores: only eats producers.

Omnivores: eats consumers and producers.

Carnivores: eats only consumers.


400

What are two major threats to biodiversity caused by humans?

Pollution and overexploitation.

500

What happens to ecosystems when biodiversity decreases?

Connections weaken and species can be harmed or die out.

500

Why is Latin used to classify organisms?

It was the language of science when classification began.

500

Give one example of each: vertebrate and invertebrate.

Vertebrate: fish, amphibians, mammals and birds.

Invertebrates: insects, arachnids and crustaceans.

500

What is photosynthesis?

Plants use energy from the sun, carbon dioxide from the air, and nutrients from soil to create their own sugar (energy). This releases oxygen into the air.

500

List three ways humans can protect biodiversity.

Turn off electronics, reuse/recycle, save water, or use energy-efficient appliances.

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