Grab Bag
Ecosystems
Food Webs
Organism Relationships
Speciation
100

What is the Cryosphere?

The part of the Hydrosphere that involves all ice.

100

Which organism in the chart would have the smallest population? (Imagine a pyramid)

Hawk

Snake

Frog

Grasshopper

Grass

Hawk 

100

How are food webs different from food chains?

More complex, show multiple interactions.

100

A bird cleans the teeth of a crocodile.  The bird eats the parasites from the teeth while cleaning them.  What kind of relationship is this?

Mutualism

100

Why is it so difficult to determine how many species exist on Earth?

No single database, haven't explored everywhere, things go extinct everyday, etc.

200

Give an example of a feature in each of the Earth's spheres.

Answers will vary

200

What do you call the place where an organism lives?

Its habitat

200

Which of the following organisms is a producer?

Hawk

Cat

Mouse

Sunflower

Starling

Sunflower (producers are plants)

200

Describe 2 specific prey adaptations.

Answers will vary.

Ex. camouflage - disguising to hide from predators

warning calls - loud sound to warn others of a predator

speed - being fast

etc.

200

Rank endangered, threatened, and extinct from most numbers to least.

threatened, endangered, extinct

300

Where do autotrophs get their energy?

The sun, chemical compounds

300

Give an example of two abiotic factors in an ecosystem.

Answers will vary, non-living things

ex. rocks, water, clouds, etc.

300

Why are decomposers and scavengers found all throughout the food chain?

They feed on dead and decaying material from every level, they are constantly at work.

300

Koalas are found in areas that have eucalyptus trees to support their limited diet.  Are they specialists or generalists?

Specialists.  Koalas have a specialized diet of only eucalyptus, so they do not adapt easily to new environments.

300

What are the 2 types of limiting factors?  Give an example of each.

Density-dependent: typically biotic, predation, disease, competition, etc. This kind is usually more intense as a population's density increases.

Density-independent: typically abiotic, floods, hurricanes, drought, etc.  This kind doesn't depend on the species population

400

How much energy is transferred between trophic levels?

10%

400

What is the difference between an animal's fundamental niche and realized niche?

Fundamental - the role it would play in an environment with no competition

Realized - it's actual role in a real life scenario, taking into account competition and predation

400

An autotroph and an herbivore are shown in a food chain.  Which organism would the arrow point to and what does it show?

The arrow would point to the herbivore, because the herbivore eats the autotroph, and the energy is transferred to the herbivore.  The arrow represents the energy being transferred.

400

A Kudzu vine climbs up a tree.  It steals nutrients from the tree and blocks the tree's sunlight.  What type of relationship is this?

Parasitic

400

Name the 4 types of speciation and briefly describe each.

Geographical - populations are geographically separated so no longer interbreed (ex. kaibab squirrel)

Temporal - populations reproduce at different times of the year and so no longer interbreed (ex. cicadas, orchids)

Mechanical - populations have incompatible reproductive organs (ex. damselflies)

Behavioral - populations have different courtship rituals and so cannot interbreed (ex. fireflies)