The non-living factors.
What are abiotic factors?
They eat only producers.
What are herbivores?
Process that plants use to make their own food.
What is photsynthesis?
The amount of energy that remains in each level.
What is 90%.
The reactants of photosynthesis.
What are water and carbon dioxide?
All organisms of the same species in a given area.
What is a population?
What are carnivores?
These show the direction energy flow.
What are arrows?
Form of energy that is considered waste energy in trophic levels.
What is thermal energy?
The reactants of cellular respiration.
What are glucose and oxygen?
Factors such as grass, trees, and animals.
What are biotic factors?
The eat both producers and consumers.
What are omnivores?
Grasses and berries are examples.
What are producers?
Reason that energy pyramids are rarely higher than 4 or five levels.
What is insufficient amount of energy at top?
The reactant that provides carbon for glucose in photosynthesis.
What is carbon dioxide?
The maximum number of organisms that an ecosystem can maintain.
What is carrying capacity?
The eat the left over kills of other consumers.
What are scavengers?
Organisms that only have arrows pointing away from them.
What are producers?
Another name for producers.
What is autotroph?
The reactant of cellular respiration that provides the carbon for carbon dioxide.
What is glucose?
All the living and non living parts of an area.
What is an ecosystem?
They break down dead organisms and waste.
What are decomposers?
Factors that keep populations from getting too big.
What are limiting factors?
Another name for consumers.
What is heterotroph?
Matter moves in this pattern, while energy moves in this pattern.
What is matter cycles and energy flows?