the variety of species in an ecosystem
Biodiversity
An organism that uses sunlight to create its food
What is a producer (autotroph)
***DAILY DOUBLE*** Carbon dioxide dissolves in water. What does this do to the pH of water?
Lowers it - which makes the water more acidic (think about how this would effect the living organisms in these ecosystems)
Give an example of a pioneer species
lichen, mosses, some grasses
an organism that hunts, kills, and eats other organisms
What is predator
Living part of an ecosystem is called...
What are biotic factors?
Where does lost energy go when moving up the trophic pyramid?
It is lost to heat, movement, and metabolic processes.
How much energy is in the secondary consumer level of this trophic pyramid?
200kcal (note: the unit you are given whether kcal or something else does not change the number)
An organism that feeds on dead and decaying animals
What are decomposers?
Plants use this process to turn light into chemical energy
What is photosynthesis?
Food chains that are interconnected/overlaps in a particular ecosystem
What is a food web?
Process that forms an ecosystem in an area with only barren rock
Primary succession
What happens to the energy level as you move up a trophic pyramid? How much energy is transferred?
decreases - only 10% is passed to the next level
Air, water, and the Sun are all ......
What is are abiotic factors?
the maximum number of individuals of a particular species that an environment can support
carrying capacity
Identify the part of the graph labeled d
carrying capacity
What are some examples of decomposers?
bacteria, fungi, worms, ants, beetles, sow bugs
when a population reaches carrying capacity, the graph will show a...
plateau
At the bottom of a trophic pyramid, what are those organisms called (the scientific term)
autotrophs, also known as producers
Describe a tertiary consumer
organisms that eat secondary consumers
something that restricts the number of organisms that can live in an area.
What is a limiting factor?
***DAILY DOUBLE***
Describe the water cycle (how does water reach earth and back into the atmosphere)
Back to atmosphere:
Evaporation (from liquid to gas)
Transpiration (plants)
Back to Earth:
Condensation (clouds)
Precipitation (rain, snow, hail)
On a trophic pyramid what is the organism that eats the producer
What are primary consumers?
Describe how an invasive species effects an ecosystem
Invasive species can eat food sources of the native species causing the native species to die off even to the point of extinction
the movement of water in a plant from the roots to the leaves, and then evaporation from the leaves
transpiration
An animal that eats plants or other animals and does not make its own food (the scientific term)
What is a heterotroph? also known as consumers
Name two human activities that affect global systems
Burning fossil fuels, deforestation, monoculture, develepment/urbanization, habitat fragmentation, hunting/fishing, introduction of invasive species, pollution
the principle which states that in competition one organism will run away or die is known as...
Competitive Exclusion Principle
Nitrogen cycle step that includes bacteria
Nitrogen fixation
An invasive species is introduced to an ecosystem and quickly outcompetes a primary consumer in the food web. The expected result of this would be...
Producers grow in number, secondary consumers begin to die off as they do not prey upon invasive species, food web falls apart shortly after
Trees are growing. Climax community is reached
if an organism uses chemical to produce energy rather than eating other organisms, it is considered a...
autotroph
Organisms in deep areas of ocean would have to adapt to not use this for producing energy
light
Difference between primary and secondary succession
Primary succession starts after a disturbance in which no soil or living things are left
Secondary succession starts after a disturbance leaves some soil and maybe some living things
When collecting data, it is important to collect results before and after. (true or false)
True