Ecosystems
Biodiversity
Climate Change
Challenges
Challenges #2
100

Name 3 Terrestrial and Aquatic Biomes

Terrestrial Biomes: Savanna, Desert, Tropical Rainforest, Subtropical desert, Taiga, Temperate Rainforest 

Aquatic Biomes: Oceans, Coral Reefs, Estuaries, Lakes and Ponds, Rivers and Streams, Wetlands, Tundra

100

Define Biodiversity.

The variety of life, in all it's forms.

The difference of species.

100

Name all 3 Major Greenhouse Gases.

Carbon Dioxide, Methane, Water Vapor.

100

Dogs and Ticks are a form of which symbiotic relationship?

Parasitism

100

A cat and a mouse is this relationship called. (not symbiotic)

Predator-prey

200

This form of symbiotic relationship benefits both species

Mutualism
200
Define Primary and Secondary succession? 

Primary: Life colonizes a lifeless area that starts from nothing. (no possiblity of life)
Secondary: The process of ecosystem recovery where a habitat is recolonized following a disturbance that removed vegetation but soil is intact (there is the possiblity of life)

200

Which Greenhouse Gas does not have a detrimental effect on the atmosphere and why?

Water Vapor since it's short resident time.

200

According to the 10% rule, if a teritary consumer had 187 kcal, how much did the primary consumer have?


18,700 kcal

200

If the NPP of a forest is 1012 and the rate of carbon is 945 what is the GPP of the forest?

67

300

Explain the 10% rule.

10% of the energy gained when eating is given to the predator.

300

Island 1 has high species evenness 

Island 2 has high species richness

Which island's species would be most likely to survive a disruption? Why?

Island 2 due to it's high biodiversity which means that there could be a species that survives it and is capable of repopulating.

300

Explain Coral Bleaching.

Algae dies or leaves Coral due to it's ecological tolerance which causes the Coral to turn white possibly being fatal.

300

Diseases are which types of disruptions?

Periodic

300
Name 2 ecosystem service do Forests provide and name 1 thing they do.
Regulating Services

Carbon Sinks, Protects soil

Provisioning services

Provides timber, Food and medicine

Cultural services

Tourism

Supporting, Habitat

400

Name 2 processes of the Nitrogen Cycle and explain them

Nitrogen Fixation: Atmospheric Nitrogen into Ammonia or Ammonium

Nitrification: Ammonia into Nitrites into Nitrates 

Assimiliation: Nitrates or Ammonium goes into the soil

Denitrification: Nitrates back into Atmospheric Nitrogen 

Ammoniafication: Dead animals/humans producing Nitrogen back into the soil

400

Explain the theory of Island Biogeography.

Colonization rates against Extinction rates determined by the size and distance an island has (Smaller = higher extinction) (Farther = Lower Immigration/Colonization)

400

Describe a method of combating anthropogenic activites that affect biodiversity.

Creating protected areas, Promoting sustainable land use practices, restoring lost habitats.

400

Name one unintended consequence of the Polar Ice Caps melting.

Global sea rise

Costal Flooding

Habitat Loss

400

Name 3 ways to determine how polluted a body of water is.

pH,turbidity,salinity,temperature
500

If the total GPP of a forest is 118, and the total NPP of the forest is 51. What is the rate of Photosynthesis.

67

500

Brazil nuts are the largest edible nuts to eat. If this was the only food source for birds on an island, would an island with a high species richness or species evenness is the most likely to go extinct, why?

An Island with a high species evenness would go extinct because the range of beak sizes would have to be big enough to eat the Brazil Nuts.

500

Explain Eutrophication 

the abundance of water by nutrients, primarily phosphorus and nitrogen, leading to excessive algal blooms, severe oxygen depletion (hypoxia), and the creation of aquatic "dead zones", this kills the fish in the water and the algae.

500

The loss of energy in a trophic pyramid is explained by the laws of...

Thermodynamics
500

Name the Nitrogen Cycle in order.

Nitrogen Fixation: Atmospheric Nitrogen into Ammonia or Ammonium 

- Nitrification: Ammonia into Nitrites into Nitrates - 

Assimiliation: Nitrates or Ammonium goes into the soil 

- Ammoniafication: Dead animals/humans producing Nitrogen back into the soil 

Denitrification: Nitrate turns into Atmospheric Nitrogen.

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