🧠 Critical Thinking & Method
🌎 Ecology & Biosphere
👥 Population Ecology
🌱 Community Ecology
🔁 Ecosystems & Global Change
100

Define inductive reasoning and give an example.

Inductive reasoning makes generalizations based on observations. Example: All swans observed so far are white, so all swans must be white.

100

 What causes Earth's seasons?

The tilt of Earth's axis (23.5°) as it orbits the sun causes seasonal variation in solar intensity.

100

 What limits a species' geographic range?

Abiotic factors (climate, geography) and biotic factors (competition, predation).

100

Define mutualism and give an example.

 Mutualism is an interaction where both species benefit. Example: Bees pollinating flowers.

100

What is the 10% Rule in energy transfer?

Only ~10% of energy is transferred from one trophic level to the next; the rest is lost as heat.

200

 Explain a step-by-step use of the scientific method.

 1) Ask a question, 2) Form a hypothesis, 3) Conduct experiment, 4) Analyze data, 5) Draw conclusions, 6) Share results.

200

How does the tilt of Earth impact biome distribution?

 Tilt causes variation in sunlight and temperature with latitude, affecting vegetation and climate.

200

Draw and label an exponential growth curve.

A J-shaped curve showing rapid, unchecked growth; population doubles over time.

200

What is the role of a keystone species?

A species with disproportionate influence on ecosystem structure (e.g., sea otters controlling sea urchin populations).

200

Identify one greenhouse gas and its effect.

CO₂ traps heat in the atmosphere, contributing to global warming.

300

 Compare inductive vs. deductive reasoning

Inductive: specific to general. Deductive: general to specific. Example: Deductive – All mammals have lungs → A dog is a mammal → A dog has lungs.

300

Explain the rainshadow effect and apply it to Washington State.

 Moist air rises over mountains, cools, and drops rain. Eastern WA is dry due to descending dry air.

300

 Describe logistic growth. How does it differ from exponential growth?

logistic: S-shaped curve with carrying capacity. Growth slows as resources become limited.

300

Define and distinguish between fundamental and realized niches

Fundamental: where a species can live. Realized: where it does live, limited by competition.

300

Interpret a diagram of the nitrogen cycle.

Nitrogen is fixed by bacteria, taken up by plants, eaten by animals, and returned by decomposition.

400

Give an example of an emergent property at the ecosystem level.

 Nutrient cycling or energy flow — properties not found in individual organisms.

400

How does solar radiation affect air circulation and biome placement?

Warm air rises at equator, cools, drops moisture → forms tropical forests. Dry air descends → deserts.

400

How do intra- and interspecific interactions affect dispersion patterns?

Competition can cause uniform spacing (intraspecific), while clumped patterns may result from resource distribution or social groups.

400

Predict effects of removing a top predator from a food web.

Trophic cascade: prey populations increase, altering ecosystem balance (e.g., overgrazing).

400

Explain how dead zones form and name one consequence.

Excess nutrients → algal blooms → oxygen depletion → marine life dies.

500

Evaluate the quality of an experiment and identify flaws in its design.

Look for lack of control group, small sample size, uncontrolled variables, or bias.

500

Predict the effect of increasing Hadley Cell size on biome locations.

Tropical and desert zones could shift poleward, changing biome distributions. 

500

 Predict how a high adult survival rate affects reproductive strategy.

Species may reproduce later, have fewer offspring, and invest more in each one (K-strategy).

500

Describe ecological succession and give an example of facilitation.

Succession is change in species over time. Facilitation: early species (e.g., mosses) make conditions better for later ones.

500

 Propose one solution from restoration ecology and explain its mechanism.

Replanting native species restores habitat, stabilizes soil, and promotes biodiversity.