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Processes
Concepts
Wild Card
100

This is a system of classification in which different levels are ranked according to size or superiority

What is a hierarchy?

100

This is a group of interacting populations living in the same place at the same time

What is a community?

100

These organisms make form the base of every food chain

What are autotrophs/producers?

100

This is described as the maximum number of organisms that an environment can support

What is the carrying capacity? 

100

This is the definition of ecology

What is 'the scientific study of the interrelationships between organisms and their non-living environments?' 

200

This refers to the general process by which one biotic community replaces another over time

What is ecological succession?

200

This occurs when one group of plant communities replaces another over time, where a biotic community has existed before

What is secondary succession?

200

This term refers to the process by which biotic/plant communities replace each other over time, in an area of bare rock or sand

What is primary succession?

200

These are two factors that influence what types of plant communities can form in any location on earth

What are 1) climate, 2) weather, and 3) latitude?

200

This is the definition of a limiting factor

What is 'any biotic or abiotic factor that restricts the growth or distribution of a population?' 

300

Define an ecosystem engineer and give an example

What is 1) any organism that creates or modifies habitat and increases the biodiversity of an area and 2) beavers, Gopher tortoise, pollinators? 

300

Define mutualism and give an example

What is 1) a type of symbiotic relationship where both organisms benefit and 2) humans and dogs, crocodiles and bird species, rhinos and bird species, sharks and cleaning fish, etc? 

300

Define parasitism and provide two examples

What is 1) a symbiotic relationship where one organism benefits and the other organism is harmed and 2) humans and tapeworms, dogs and ticks/fleas, humans and mosquitoes, rats and fleas, etc? 

300

These are the four criteria that organisms must meet to be considered members of the same species

What is 1) carry the same number of chromosomes, 2) carry the same genes in the same order on those chromosomes, 3) live in the same place at the same time, and 4) be able to reproduce and create a fertile offspring? 

300

This term describes how organisms are spread through their environment 

What is 'spatial distribution?' 

400

Define 'scavengers' and provide two examples

What are 'organisms that feed on the leftovers of organisms that have already been killed; vultures, buzzards, hyenas, crows/ravens?'

400

List four density-independent factors that could affect populations

What are 1) forest fires, 2) floods, 3) droughts, 4) hurricanes, 5) volcanoes, 6) earthquakes, 7) tsunamis, etc? 

400

Briefly explain what happens when an apex predator is removed from its ecosystem

What is 'the populations below the predator on the food chain either explode or collapse and the entire ecosystem can collapse as well?' 

400

Define a predator and give two examples

What is 'any organisms that uses energy to hunt and kills its prey; ex: wolves, lions, tigers, any big cats, foxes, hawks, etc?'

400

Is an apex predator always a keystone species? Why or why not?

What is 1) yes and 2) because all apex predators maintain or increase the biodiversity of the ecosystem that they are a part of? 

500

List three density-dependent factors that can affect populations

What are 1) predation, 2) disease, 3) competition for mates, 4) competition for other resources, 5) types of symbiosis?

500

Define the term 'tolerance' and explain how this concept relates to pioneer species

What is 'tolerance refers to the range of environmental conditions that an organism can withstand; all pioneer species have to have broad ecological tolerance so they can exploit the very limited resources found in harsh environments like bare rock or sand?' 

500

Define 'decomposers,' give an example, and explain why they are so important in ecosystems

What is 1) any organism that feeds of dead or decaying matter, 2) bacteria, worms, and fungi, 3) they breakdown organic matter into basic elements that are recycled back into the environment?

500

List the two major ways that carbon is released into the atmosphere and two major ways carbon is 'permanently' removed from the atmosphere

What are 1) cellular respiration of plants & animals and burning fossil fuels (release carbon into atmosphere), 2) the ocean and photosynthesis of autotrophs (would also accept formation of fossils)? 

500

List the levels that make up the hierarchy of life from atoms to the biosphere

What is 'atoms > compounds > biomolecules > organelles > cells > tissues > organs > organ systems > organisms/individuals/species > populations > communities > ecosystems > biomes > biosphere?'