Principles of Ecology
Evolution and Adaptations
Populations
Biodiversity
Conservation
100

The term for each of the levels in a food web or pyramid

What is a trophic level?

100

Much of Charles Darwin's inspiration for his theory of evolution came from these islands

What are the Galapagos Islands?

100

Rapid reproduction rates under ideal conditions with seemingly unlimited resources is known as this

What is exponential growth?

100

The benefits that nature provides to human civilization for free

What are ecosystem services?

100

A conservation strategy where local people promote their natural resources to visitors as a way to make money while protecting the environment

What is ecotourism?

200

The three types of symbiosis

What is mutualism, commensalism, and parasitism?

200
Harmless species who imitate venomous species are practicing this form of adaptation

What is bayesian mimicry?

200

The term for mechanisms that control and limit population growth in nature

What are limiting factors?

200

The process where toxic substances accumulate and concentrate in the tissues of organisms as they move up the food web

What is biomagnification?

200

The two major views on conservation

What are pragmatism and preservationism?

300

Some organisms are known as 'self-feeders', whereas other organisms are considered 'other-feeders'

What are autotrophs and heterotrophs?

300

After a mass extinction (or upon colonizing new island environments), the surviving species often undergo this process

What is adaptive radiation?

300

The process of colonization and gradually increasing diversity in a community following a natural disaster

What is secondary succession?

300

The three main types of biodiversity

What are species, ecosystem, and genetic diversity?

300

Organisms that attract a lot of attention and public support for conservation efforts, such as whales or panda bears, are referred to as these

What are charismatic megafauna?

400

Besides producers, these organisms fulfill the most critical role in the food web

What are decomposers?

400

These are the three isolating mechanisms that lead to reproductive isolation

What are geographic, behavioral, and temporal isolation?

400

Algal blooms from fertilizer runoff that lead to dead zones are a result of this process involving limiting nutrients

What is eutrophication?

400

The four major threats to biodiversity

What are habitat fragmentation/alteration, overexploitation, pollution, and invasive species?

400

The four endangered species in the Upper Gulf that CEDO is actively trying to conserve

What are the Totoaba, Least Tern, Yuma Clapper Rail, and Vaquita

500

The three community interactions that can be considered biotic factors

What are predation, competition, and symbiosis?

500

Darwin's theory of evolution was largely based on these four key pieces of evidence

What is the fossil record, geographic distribution of living species, homologous body structures, and similarities in early development?

500

Each of the limiting factors that curb the growth of a population

What are predation, competition, parasites/disease, natural disasters, and human disturbances?

500

The different types of ecosystem services

What are provisioning, regulating, cultural, and supporting services?

500

The 'Red Queen Hypothesis' can be described as this

What is 'organisms must continually evolve, or succumb to their predators and parasites that will'