Food Webs
Energy Pyramids
Water Cycle
Carbon Cycle
Nitrogen Cycle 1
Nitrogen Cycle 2
100

Heterotrophs are organisms that cannot make their own food; they are also called this because they must consume other organisms for energy

What are consumers?


100

Each level on a energy pyramid or food web is called a ________  __________

What is a trophic level?

100

Number 4 on this diagram of the water cycle, water leaves the atmosphere in the form of rain or snow

What is precipitation?

100

Letter A of the carbon cycle diagram, factories release carbon dioxide (CO2) into the atmosphere

What is burning fossil fuels?


100

Nitrogen gas (N2) makes up this % of the Earth's atmosphere

What is 78%?

100

Plants get their nitrogen from the soil. Animals get their nitrogen from this activity

What is eating plants?

200

In this food web, there is the food chain: 

algae-->minnow-->bluegill-->raccoon

The bluegill is this level of consumer

What is secondary consumer?

200

The aphids are this trophic level

What are primary consumers?

200

Number one on this diagram of the water cycle, water seeps into the ground to become groundwater

What is percolation?

200

Letter C on this diagram of the carbon cycle, where plants take carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere

What is photosynthesis?

200

Bacteria A is called this, and it converts nitrogen from the atmosphere into ammonia

What is nitrogen-fixing bacteria?

200

Number 1 of the Nitrogen Cycle, found in the atmosphere

What is N2, or atmospheric nitrogen gas?

300

The raccoon eats blueberries, eggs, and fish. Because it eats both plants and animals, it is classified as a __________

What is an omnivore?

300

The snakes are at this trophic level

What is tertiary consumer?

300

Number 6 on the water cycle diagram, water in the atmosphere changes from a gas to a liquid and forms clouds

What is condensation?

300

Photosynthesis allows autotrophs to make their own food, and it also removes this from the atmosphere and releases oxygen

What is carbon dioxide?

or

CO2

300

Bacteria C turns ammonia into nitrates so that plants can use it

What is nitrifying bacteria?

300

Nitrogen-fixing bacteria and ammonifying bacteria turn nitrogen into this compound, shown as number 2 on the diagram

What is ammonia (NH3)?

400

This class of heterotrophs cause decay by breaking down dead matter and returning nutrients to the ecosystem. An example is mushrooms

What are decomposers?

400

The raccoon is at this trophic level

What is quaternary consumer?

400

Number 7 on this diagram is the changing of water from a liquid state to a gas state

What is Evaporation?

400

Letter E and D on the carbon cycle, when plants and animals release carbon dioxide (CO2) into the atmosphere

What is respiration?

400

Bacteria D turns nitrates back into nitrogen gas, which returns to the atmosphere

What is de-nitrifying bacteria?

400

Number 5 on the diagram, nitrates are absorbed by plants in order build these

What are plant proteins?

500

Name the three producers in this food web

What are blueberries, algae, and duckweed?

500

This much  food energy is transferred up each level of the energy pyramid

What is 10%?

500

Number 5 on this diagram of the water cycle, water is released into the atmosphere from the leaves of plants

What is transpiration?

500

Name 2 human activities that release carbon into the air

What are burning fossil fuels,

cutting and burning trees,

mining

500

These 2 processes result in the production of ammonia in the nitrogen cycle

What are nitrogen fixation AND ammonification?

500

The absorption and incorporation of nitrogen into plant and animal compounds

What is assimilation?