Ecosystems & Succession
Biogeochemical Cycles
Communities & Symbiosis
Biomes & Us
Energy Flow in Ecosystems
100

The scientific study of interactions among organisms with each other and with the environment 

What is ecology

100

These kinds of ecological systems (including the water cycle, nitrogen cycle, and carbon cycle) are so named because they describe cycles of LIFE, EARTH, and ELEMENTS.

What are BioGeoChemical Cycles?

100

This is one example of a resource for which different species compete.

What is food? water? shelter? mates? nesting sites? sunlight? soil?

100

This biome is typically a flat and treeless region of land that has a layer of permafrost

What is a tundra?

100

These consumers will consume both plants AND animals for energy.

What are omnivores?

200

These kinds of nonliving factors can and do affect ecosystems: soil, climate, pollution.

What are Abiotic factors?

200

This is one type of fossil fuel, which takes millions of years to form from the decayed remains of ancient organisms.

What is natural gas? coal? oil?

200

A symbiotic relationship in which one individual is harmed but the other is benefitted. 

What is parasitism?

200

Chicago is located around one of these two biomes (name one)

What is grassland?

What is temperate forest?

200

Unlike producers (or autotrophs) this category of organisms get their energy by consuming other organisms.

What are consumers?

What are heterotrophs?

300

This describes the relationship between living organisms and their environment. Every organism relies on other organisms to survive.

What is interdependence?

300
Plants are a critical part of the carbon cycle because they use this process to convert light energy into sugars, releasing oxygen into the air, which is necessary for most life.

What is photosynthesis?

300

A symbiotic relationship in which both participating individuals benefit

What is mutualism?

300
This is an area where freshwater meets saltwater.

What is an estuary?

300

This is the approximate percentage of energy that is passed from one trophic level to the next.

What is 10 percent?

400

Within an ecosystem, the variety of organisms, their genetic differences, and where these differences occur.

What is biodiversity?

400

This phenomena is part of the Water Cycle, by which water evaporates directly from plants

What is transpiration?

400

Species that are brought to a new habitat by human means (may be purposeful or accidental, e.g., tourism, travel)

What are invasive species?

400

This is one of many actions I can take to reduce my carbon footprint.

TA choice.

400

These organisms are important parts of many geochemical cycles: they cause decay and release nutrients back into the environment. Some examples include mushrooms or bacteria.

What are decomposers?

500

On land, this type of succession occurs where no soil previously existed

What is primary succession?

500

This necessary element makes up over 70% of our atmosphere, but most organisms are unable to use it in this form--we rely on bacteria in the soil to fix it into compounds usable by other living things

What is Nitrogen?

500

A symbiotic relationship in which only one individual benefits, but the other remains unharmed.

What is commensalism?

500

We can and should pressure our elected officials to protect our state and national parks, because trees are a critical part of this biogeochemical cycle.

What is the water cycle?

What is the carbon cycle?

500

In the following food chain: leaf--> grasshopper--> frog--> snake--> owl, this term describes what type of consumer is the frog.

What is secondary consumer?

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