Trophic Terms
Trophic Terms 2
Symbiosis
Ecology
Ecology 2
100

What is an autotroph?

An organism that produces its own food.

100

What is a population?

All organisms of the same species living in close proximity.  

100

What is the type of symbiosis between a deer and grass?

Predation

100

Which of the trophic levels have the most stored energy available?

Producer

100

What is the definition and an example of a keystone species?

A species that affects its environment disproportionately to its biomass or number.

200

What is a heterotroph?

An organism that cannot make its own food.  

200

All the different species of an ecosystem are referred to as the...

community

200

What is the type of symbiosis between bees and flowers?

Mutualism

200

What is a trophic cascade?  What are the interactions for trophic cascades between species?  

A trophic cascade is when the addition or removal of a high trophic level predator affects a mid-tier trophic level that creates indirect interactions throughout the ecosystem.  

200

What is the ten percent rule for energy transfer in ecology?

The ten percent rule of energy transfer states that each level in an ecosystem only gives 10% of its energy to the levels above it.

300

What is a primary consumer?  What does it eat?

An herbivore.

300

What are examples of producers?

Plants, phytoplankton

300

What is the type of symbiosis between bird nests and trees?

Commensalism

300

What would happen to producers with an increase of secondary consumers?

Producers would increase as herbivores decrease.

300

What happens to biomass as trophic levels increase?

Biomass decreases due to less energy available.

400

What is a secondary consumer?  What does it eat?

It eats herbivores.

400

What is a detritovore?  What are some examples?

A type of decomposer that eats dead organic matter.  Worms, vultures.  

400

What type of symbiosis would barnacles living on whales be?

Commensalism

400

What is an example of an increase of intraspecific competition?

A young and an old wolf competing for food.
400

What is bottom-up regulation and an example?

When limited resources affect trophic levels in an ecosystem.  Producers regulate trophic levels.  


Phytoplankton in the ocean affecting fish and dolphin populations.

500

What is a tertiary consumer?  What does it eat? 

It eats carnivores.  

500

What is a saprovore?  What are examples?

A type of decomposer that eats dead organic matter.  Bacteria and fungi.

500

What is the type of symbiosis between the algae and fungi in lichen and why?

Mutualism because the fungus gives the algae nitrogen and the algae gives the fungus carbon.  

500

What is biomagnification?

The gradual accumulation of a substance, such as  pesticides or other chemicals, in an organism

500

If a cougar eats a hare that has a total of 350 kilocalories of food energy, how many kilocalories are converted to biomass if the cougar loses 85 percent of the food energy to waste and cellular respiration?  

52.5 Kilocalories