A relationship in which both species benefit
Mutualism
The main source of energy for all organisms?
The sun
True or false- Carbon is always moving and never runs out
TRUE
What percent of energy do the producers have?
100%
Who is from the planet Krypton?
Superman
A relationship in which both species compete for the same limited resource
Competition
True or False- Energy never runs out.
False
How does a carbon molecule go from a plant to an animal?
Eat it
If the producers have 4545 Calories of energy, how much energy do the tertiary consumers have?
4.5 Calories
Which book features the character Katniss Everdeen
The Hunger Games
A relationship in which one organism eats another organism as food
Predation
Who on the pyramid gets 100% of the energy?

Producers
What is the process in which plants take in carbon dioxide from the air?
Photosynthesis
If the producers have 34500 Calories of energy, how much energy do the primary consumers have?
3,450 Calories of energy
What is the hardest natural substance on Earth?
Diamond
Commensalism
Who has the least amount of energy?
Tertiary Consumers/ Apex predators
Give one example of fast moving carbon and one example of slow moving cabron
Fast- Photosynthesis/animal eating plant/decomposing
Slow- rocks eroding/ deep ocean carbon or sediments
If the primary consumers have 2595 Calories or energy, how much energy do the secondary consumers have?
259.5 Calories
Which actor stars in major roles like Pirates of the Caribbean and Edward Scissor Hands.
Mistletoes take nutrients and water from trees, weakening the tree and depleting its health
Parasitism
What do the arrows in the food chain tell us
A. What the organism is eating
B. Where the energy goes
C. What/who the organism gets its energy from

Where the energy goes
Who's role is it to break down dead organisms, releasing the carbon back into the air for the carbon cycle to continue
Decomposers
If the producers have 9525 Calories of energy, how much do the secondary consumers have?
95.2 Calories
Invertebrates are animals without...
Backbones