Mutualism
Commensalism
Communities
Biogeography
Species Diversity
100

A relationship in which both members benefit.

What is mutualism?

100

It is the definition of commensalism.

What is the relationship between two species in which one benefits and the other is neither harmed or hurt?

100

Succession where glaciers retreat and bare rock is left.

What is primary succession?

100

Biogeography is_____________

What is the study of the distribution of species and ecosystems in geographic space and through geological time. .

100

An area with high species diversity would be considered 

What is a healthier/or more stable ecosystem?

200

An interaction between two different species that live in close proximity to one another.

What is symbiosis?

200

An example of commensalism

(Examples are many)

What is the dog and human, Remora and shark, cleaner fish and other fish, epiphytes and trees

200

Succession in which a fire or flood affected the land.

What is secondary succession?

200

Biogeography shapes species_____________ on the earth. 

What is distribution?

200

Is a series of extinctions triggered by a primary keystone species extinction.

What is ecological cascade?

300

Ants and the Acacia trees have a mutualistic relationship where the ants will what two things from the tree?

What is shelter/protection and food?

300

One type of commensal relationship where one species depends on the other to flourish 

What is metabiosis?

300

Nonliving parts of an ecosystem are called this.

What are abiotic factors?

300

The study of the fragmentation of species due to the formations of islands.

What is island biogeography?

300

The name for the number of different species represented in a community.

What is species richness?

400

Symbiosis is translated from the Greek words meaning______________

What is "living together?"

400

Another type of commensalism in which one species uses the other for lodging or shelter.

What is inquilinism?

400

The largest population of any single species an area can hold that is determined by the available energy, water, oxygen and minerals available as well as by the interaction of organisms (food supply and competition).

What is carrying capacity?

400

The continent of Australia is an excellent examples of how the isolation of land masses effects the distribution of species. About 75% of all the species of plants and animals in Australia are unique to that continent. This is due to a phenomenon involving the earth's crust.

What is continental drift and the break up of Pangea causing landmass isolation.

400

Refers to how close in numbers each species in an environment is.

What is species evenness?

500

Coral reefs are a result of the mutualistic relationship between which two organisms?

What are coral and algae?

500

Type of commensalism that involves one species travelling on the other without parasitism. 

What is phoresy?

500

Struggle between organism for the same resources. This keeps the size of a species population in check.

What is competition?

500

Credited with making biogeography popular with his studies in southeast Asia in the late 19th century.

Who is Alfred Wallace?

500

Reason species diversity is important to humans.

What is for the health of the ecosystem/creations of new medicines/feeding of the world? (any of those answers)