Life
Nutrient Cycles
Ecosystems
Populations
Other
100

When can a chicken egg be considered living?

When it is fertilized! 

100

Name the three nutrient cycles we learned in this class. 

Water cycle, carbon cycle, and oxygen cycle. 

100

What is the main source of energy for life on Earth?

The Sun! 

100

What is carrying capacity?

The biggest size a population can be that an ecosystem can support. 

100

Name the four types of Macromolecules

Carbohydrates, Lipids, Proteins, and Nucleic Acids
200

What is homeostasis?

A steady-state (balance). 

200

What does the term "transpiration" mean?

It's when water is released from the leaves of a plant and returns to the atmosphere as water vapor. 

200
How much energy moves from one trophic level to the next? 

10% of the energy from the level below is able to move up the pyramid. 

200

How are "populations" different from "species"?

Species are all the same type of organism. Populations are the same species IN A GIVEN AREA. 

200

What are "metabolic functions"?

These are things such as eating, moving, breathing, your organs pumping, etc. Think "LIVING". 

300

Name an example of how human bodies act in order to return to homeostasis. 

Ex. Sweating or shivering

300

What is the difference between a producer and a consumer?

A producer makes it's own sugar to make energy and consumers have to eat in order to gain sugar to make energy. 

300

What is the difference between an herbivore, a carnivore, and an omnivore?

Herbivores only eat plants. 

Carnivores only eat meat. 

Omnivores can eat both plants and meat. 

300

Why is there a lag period at the beginning of logistical and exponential growth?

The population is too small to grow drastically, so it will grow slowly at first (lag phase) before it grows quickly. 

300

What is the difference between osmosis and diffusion?

Diffusion is the movement of molecules across a membrane, from areas of high concentration to low concentration. Osmosis is the diffusion of water. 

400

Does each individual need to have all 8 characteristics of life in order to be considered living?

No! But the species needs to have all 8 characteristics. 

400

Is there ever a point in the nutrient cycles where the carbon, water, or oxygen gets stuck/can't move to another location?

No! The cycles always have a way to move in and out of different areas. 

400

What happens to the 90% of energy that does not move up the trophic pyramid? 

90% of the energy at each level is lost to metabolic functions and heat. 

400

What is the difference between density dependent and density independent limiting factors?

Density Dependent - Will impact populations differently based on the size of the population. 

Density Independent - Will impact populations REGARDLESS of the size of the population. 

400

How is the human population growing?

It is growing exponentially! 

500

Name all 8 characteristics of life. 

1. Cells

2. Organization

3. Reproduction

4. Response to Stimuli

5. Homestasis

6. Store and Process Energy

7. Grow and Develop

8. Evolution and Adaptations

500

Draw a picture with a plant, an animal, and carbon in the atmosphere. Draw the ways that carbon would move throughout that environment. 

Should have: 

1. Cellular Respiration from plant to carbon

2. Cellular Respiration from animal to carbon

3. Photosynthesis from carbon to plant

4. Consumption (Eating) from plant to animal

500

Draw me a four level trophic pyramid. You do not need to draw pictures in each level, but you need to label each level with the TYPE of organism goes in each level. 

Top: Tertiary Consumers

Second: Secondary Consumers

Third: Primary Consumers

Bottom: Producers

500

List 3 density dependent factors and 3 density independent factors. 

Density Dependent: Predators, food, shelter, disease. 

Density Independent: Natural Disasters, water, temperature, nutrients. 

500

What is the difference between biotic and abiotic factors?

Biotic: Living

Abiotic: Non-living. 

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