Ecosystems
Sampling
Food Chains and Webs
Biotic and Abiotic Factors
Competition
100

What is a population?

A group of organisms of the same species.

100

What tool is used to count organisms in a small area?

Quadrat.

100

What does an arrow show in a food chain?

Direction of energy transfer.

100

What is a biotic factor?

A living factor that affects a community.

100

What do animals compete for?

Food, space, and mates.

200

What is a community?

Different populations living together and depending on each other.

200

What is random sampling used for?

To estimate the size of a population.

200

What is a producer?

An organism (usually a plant) that makes its own food using photosynthesis.

200

What is an abiotic factor?

A non-living factor that affects a community.

200

What do plants compete for?

Light, water, minerals, and space.

300

What makes an ecosystem different from a community?

An ecosystem includes both the community and the non-living (abiotic) environment, while a community is only living organisms.

300

What is systematic sampling?

Sampling at regular intervals to see how organisms are distributed

300

What is the difference between primary and secondary consumers?

Primary consumers eat producers; secondary consumers eat primary consumers.

300

Give one example of each type of factor.

Biotic: predators; Abiotic: temperature (or light/water).

300

Why do organisms compete in an ecosystem?

Because resources are limited.

400

Give an example of an ecosystem and identify one biotic and one abiotic factor in it.

Example: rainforest – biotic: plants/animals, abiotic: sunlight/water.

400

Describe how a transect is used in sampling.

A transect line is laid across an area and quadrats are placed at intervals to record organisms.

400

Predict what happens if a prey population decreases.

Predator numbers may decrease due to less food.

400

Describe how one abiotic factor can affect organisms.

Example: low temperature can reduce survival or reproduction.

400

Describe how competition can affect population size.

Strong competitors survive and increase; weaker ones decrease.

500

Explain how different populations depend on each other within a community.

Populations depend on each other for food and survival (e.g. predators rely on prey, plants support herbivores).

500

Explain why a transect is useful when investigating how a factor affects organism distribution.

It shows how a factor (e.g. distance from water) affects where organisms are found.

500

Explain how removing one species could affect multiple populations in a food web.

Removing a species can affect many others by disrupting feeding relationships across the web.

500

Explain how biotic and abiotic factors together influence where organisms can live.

Abiotic factors set conditions, and biotic factors (like predators/competition) further affect survival and distribution.

500

Explain why the best competitors are more likely to survive and reproduce.

They are more likely to survive, reproduce, and pass on their genes.