Food Webs
Palm Oil
Orangutans
Sustainability
Abiotic & Biotic Factors
100

 What is a food web? Give a one-sentence definition.

A network of feeding relationships showing how energy and nutrients move between organisms.

100

What is palm oil and name one common product that contains it.

Vegetable oil from oil palm fruit; found in snacks, baked goods, soap, cosmetics.

100

Are orangutans herbivores, carnivores, or omnivores? Give a short reason.

Omnivores (mostly fruit, some leaves/insects); diet mainly plant-based but opportunistic.

100

What does the word "sustainability" mean in an environmental context (one sentence)?

Meeting present needs without harming future generations' ability to meet their needs.

100

Define "abiotic factor" and give one example.

Abiotic = non-living environmental factor (e.g., temperature, rainfall, soil).

200

In a simple food web, who are producers and why are they important?

Producers (plants) make food via photosynthesis and support all other levels.

200

Identify one country or region where palm oil plantations are widespread.

Indonesia, Malaysia, parts of West/Central Africa, and Latin America.

200

Name one way that palm oil expansion threatens orangutan populations.

  • Loss of habitat from forest clearing, increased human-wildlife conflict, illegal hunting/poaching.

200

Give one example of a sustainable practice individuals can do at home.

educe/reuse/recycle, energy conservation, buy certified sustainable products.

200

Define "biotic factor" and give one example.

Biotic = living factor (e.g., plants, animals, fungi, microbes).

300

Draw (describe in words) a short food chain relevant to a tropical forest that includes a plant, an insect, and a larger animal.

Example chain: Fruit tree → caterpillar → small bird (or lizard).

300

Describe one environmental impact of converting rainforest to palm oil plantations.

  • Deforestation, habitat loss, carbon emissions, soil erosion

300

Describe one behavior or trait of orangutans that makes them vulnerable when forests are cut down.

They need large trees for nesting and travel; slow reproduction rates make recovery slow.

300

 Explain how sustainable agriculture differs from conventional agriculture (two differences).

Sustainable agriculture emphasizes soil health, diversified crops, less chemical use, longer-term yields vs. short-term high-input monocultures.

300

 Describe how an abiotic factor (like rainfall) can affect a biotic factor (like plant growth) in a tropical forest.

Rainfall affects soil moisture → plant growth → food available for herbivores → affects whole food web.

400

Explain how removing a top predator from a food web could change the populations of other organisms (give a clear example).

Removing a top predator (e.g., large cat) can increase herbivore populations → overgrazing → plant decline → reduced biodiversity.

400

Explain one social or economic benefit and one environmental cost of palm oil farming.

jobs, income, economic development; Cost — biodiversity loss, displacement of communities, greenhouse gas release.

400

Explain how conserving habitat for orangutans can also help other species and people (give two connected reasons).

  • Conserving forest protects many species (habitat preservation) and maintains ecosystem services (water, carbon) for people.

400

Describe a metric or idea used to measure whether a product is sustainable (for example: lifecycle, certification). Explain briefly.

product life-cycle analysis, carbon footprint, RSPO certification; these track environmental impacts or responsible practices.

400

Choose a single species and list two abiotic and two biotic factors that influence its survival.

  • Example species: a frog — abiotic: temperature, moisture; biotic: prey insects, predators like snakes.

500

Describe how habitat loss from palm oil plantations might simplify a forest food web and explain one ecological consequence.

Removing a top predator (e.g., large cat) can increase herbivore populations → overgrazing → plant decline → reduced biodiversity.

500

Suggest two farming or policy changes that could reduce the negative environmental effects of palm oil production.

enforce no-deforestation policies, support smallholder certification, improve yield on existing land, use traceable supply chains.

500

Propose a realistic community-based solution that could help protect orangutans while supporting local livelihoods.

  • Community ecotourism, sustainable agroforestry, payment for ecosystem services, alternative livelihoods like fruit agroforests

500

Design a short plan (3 steps) a palm oil company could take to move toward more sustainable practices while keeping jobs.

commit to no-deforestation and traceable supply chains; 2) invest in smallholder training for higher yields on existing land; 3) fund restoration and community programs.

500
  • Explain how a change in an abiotic factor (such as a decrease in soil nutrients) could change species composition over time in a forest.

Food Webs

Lower soil nutrients → fewer nutrient-demanding plants → favors tolerant species → shifts in herbivores and predators over time.