Ecology
Genetics
Energy
Cycles
Wild Card
100

In ecology, this term describes the nonliving physical and chemical factors—like sunlight, water, and temperature—that affect an ecosystem.

What is Abiotic?

100

This term refers to the genetic makeup of an organism—the specific alleles it carries for a trait.

What is a genotype?

100

This ecological model shows a linear sequence of who eats whom, starting with producers and ending with top predators.

What is a Food Chain?

100

This continuous process describes how H and O moves through the Earth’s atmosphere, surface, and underground, including evaporation, condensation, and precipitation.

What is the water cycle?

100

This process involves the movement of particles from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration until equilibrium is reached.

What is Diffusion?

200

In ecology, this term refers to all the different populations of living organisms that interact and live together in the same area.

What is  a community?

200

This term describes the observable physical or biological traits of an organism, influenced by its genes and environment.

What is a phenotype?

200

This ecological model shows how multiple food chains are interconnected, illustrating who eats whom in an ecosystem.

What is a Food Web?

200

Plants play a major role in this cycle as they are they made biotic factor that can remove it from the atmosphere. 

What is the Carbon Cycle?

200

This scale measure the acidity of a solution

What is the Ph Scale?

300

In ecology, this term describes any biotic or abiotic factor that restricts the growth, abundance, or distribution of a population.

What is a limiting factor?

300

This molecule, made of a double helix of nucleotides, carries the genetic instructions used in the growth, development, and functioning of all living organisms.

What is DNA?

300

This process allows plants, algae, and some bacteria to use sunlight, carbon dioxide, and water to produce glucose and oxygen.

What is Photosynthesis? 

300

In science, this term refers to any place—natural or artificial—where a substance like water, nutrients, or atoms are stored for later use.

What is a reservoir?

300

This process breaks down food into smaller molecules that the body can absorb and use for energy, growth, and repair.

What is Digestion?

400

In ecology, this term describes the maximum number of individuals of a species that an environment can sustainably support.

What is Carrying Capacity? 

400

This tightly coiled structure made of DNA and proteins carries genetic information and is found in the nucleus of a cell.

What is a Chromosome?

400

This process occurs in the cells of organisms to convert glucose and oxygen into energy (ATP), carbon dioxide, and water.

What is Cellular Respiration?

400

In this cycle, Bactria is essential to make the elements usable to other living organisms 

What is the Nitrogen Cycle?

400

This flexible, semi-permeable barrier surrounds a cell, controlling what enters and exits and helping maintain homeostasis.

What is the cell membrane?

500

An organism that has a disproportionate effect on the ecosystem

What is a Keystone Species?

500

This process, described by Charles Darwin, explains how organisms with genes better suited to their environment are more likely to survive and reproduce.

What is Natural Selection?

500

This molecule is known as the “energy currency” of the cell, storing and providing energy for cellular processes.

What is ATP?

500

This cycle lacks an atmospheric reservoir

What is the Phosphorus cycle?

500

This cellular process moves molecules across a membrane against their concentration gradient, requiring energy, usually in the form of ATP.

What is active transport?

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