Microbiology
Plants
Neuroscience
Endangered and Extinct Species
National Parks
100

These are single-celled organisms that lack a nucleus.

Prokaryotes

100

This colorful part of a flower attracts pollinators like bees and butterflies.

The Petals

100

This part of the brain controls balance and coordination

The Cerebellum

100

This extinct animal, closely related to the modern elephant, once roamed the Ice Age tundra.

The Woolly Mammoth

100

This was the first National Park, established in 1872.

Yellowstone National Park

200

Gram staining differentiates bacteria based on this structural feature.

The Cell Wall

200

This pigment gives plants their green color.

 Chlorophyll

200

These cells transmit electrical signals in the nervous system.

Neurons

200

This flightless bird, driven extinct by hunting and invasive species in the 1600s, was native to Mauritius.

The Dodo

200

This state has the most National Parks of any in the U.S.

California

300

This term describes bacteria that thrive in high-salt environments.

Halophiles

300

This group of plants produces seeds inside of cones, such as pines and firs.

Gymnosperms

300

This neurotransmitter is involved in mood regulation and is targeted by most antidepressants.

Serotonin

300

As of today, only this many Northern White Rhinoceros remain in the world.

2
300

This park contains the lowest point in North America, Badwater Basin.

Death Valley National Park

400

This process allows bacteria to take up naked DNA fragments from their environment.

Transformation

400

This flower blooms in pink or white clusters on an evergreen shrub. It is also the state flower of Pennsylvania.

Mountain Laurel

400

The blood-brain barrier is primarily formed by these cells.

Astrocytes

400

This classification indicates a species is at the highest risk of extinction on the IUCN Red List.

 Critically Endangered

400

This federal department oversees the National Park Service.

Department of the Interior

500

This process allows bacteria to exchange genetic material via a pilus.

Conjugation

500

Found in the Namib Desert, this ancient plant has only two leaves and can live for over 1,000 years.

The Welwitschia

500

This lobe of the brain is responsible for decision-making and personality.

The Frontal Lobe

500

The thylacine, also called the Tasmanian tiger, was last seen in the wild during this decade.

The 1930s

500

This Alaskan park is larger than entire country of Switzerland.

 Wrangell-St. Elias National Park