Definitions
Earths Structure
Canadian Biomes
Energy Transfer in Ecosystems
Energy Transfer in Ecosystems
Ecosystems by Design
100

The study of living things. 

What is biology?

100

The atmosphere, lithosphere, hydrosphere, and biosphere. 

What 4 spheres make up the Earth?

100

Boreal forest, tundra, grassland, and temperate deciduous forest.

What are the 4 major biomes of Canada.

100

A sequence of organisms, each one feeding on the next, showing how energy is transferred from one organism to the next. 

What is a food chain?

100

The function a species serves in its ecosystem including: what it eats and how it behaves.  

What is ecological niche?

100

Ecosystems that are natural and self-sustaining. 

What are natural ecosystems?

200

All living organisms that share a region and interact with each other and their nonliving environment. 

What is an ecosystem?

200

The layer of gasses above the Earth's surface. 

What is the atmosphere?

200

Abiotic factors - longer growing seasons than boreal forest, higher temps than boreal forest, fertile soil, and enough precipitation to support grass growth but not enough for trees. 

Biotic factors: bison, mice, snakes, hawks, coyotes, grasshoppers, fescue grasses etc.

What is a grassland?

200

A representation of the feeding relationships within a community. 

What is a food web?

200

The process in which the sun's energy is converted into chemical energy.

CO+ H2O + Sunlight ------------> C6H12O+ O2

What is photosynthesis?

200

Human designed and human impacted environments. 

What are engineered ecosystems?

300

All the organisms that live and interact within an area. 

What is a community?

300

All the water found on earth including lakes, oceans, and groundwater. 

What is the hydrosphere?

300

Abiotic factors: longer growing season than boreal forest, higher temps than boreal forest, fertile soil, and up to 100cm of precipitation a year. 

Biotic factors: deciduous trees and other flowering plants, tree and ground squirrels, deer, black bears etc.

What is a temperate deciduous forest?

300

Energy produced through photosynthesis - able to generate their own energy.

What is a producer?

300

The process in which energy is released from food. C6H12O+ O2   ------->  CO+ H2O + Chemical Energy 

What is cellular respiration?

300

An agricultural ecosystem. 

What is an agroecosystem? 

400

The ability to maintain balance without interruption, loss of value, and weakening. 

What is sustainability?

400

The zone around Earth where life can exist. 

What is the biosphere?

400

Abiotic factors: low temps, short growing season, permafrost, poor soil quality, low amounts of precipitation - 0-25cm a year. 

Biotic factors: rapid-flowering plants, mosses and lichens, caribou, arctic foxes etc.

What is a tundra?

400

Energy obtained from consuming other organisms - unable to produce their own energy. 

What is a consumer?

400

This ecosystem has a salt concentration of approx 3%.

What is a marine water ecosystem?

400

Plant nutrients that have come from natural sources and haven’t been chemically altered by humans that are made from plant and animal waste. 

What is a natural fertilizer?

500

Large geographical region that is defined by climate - as well as a specific set of biotic and abiotic features. 

What is a biome?

500

The hard part of the Earth's surface. 

What is the lithosphere?

500

Biotic factors: coniferous trees, seed-eating birds, squirrels, snowshoe hares, black bears, grey wolves etc. 

Abiotic factors: variable weather but warm enough there’s no permafrost, fertile soil, and over 30cm a year of precipitation. 

What is a boreal forest?

500

Stored in bonds of chemical compounds, like atoms and molecules. 

What is chemical energy?

500

Fertilizers manufactured by humans. 

What is synthetic fertilizer?