Trophic Levels
Feeding Relationships
Energy
Population Growth
Ecology
100

This group always makes up the bottom level of all energy pyramids

What are Producers?

100

An animal that hunts, kills, and eats other animals is called this

What is a Predator? 

100

These organisms cannot make their own food and must rely on other organisms for energy

What are Herterotroph?

(Acceptable: What are Consumers?)

100

Population growth trend seen only when there are no factors limiting populations

What is Exponential Growth?

100
A single living thing

What is an Organism 

200

Organisms that have a disproportionately large impact on the stability of their ecosystem are known as these critical types of species 

What is a keystone species?

200

This sequence shows how energy flows from producers to top consumers

What is a Food Chain?

200

Organisms that translate directly from Greek as "Self-Feeding"

What are Autotrophs? 

200

Anything that prevents a population from increasing

What are Limiting Factors?

200

All individuals of the same species in an area

What is a population?

300

These consumers always eat producers and occupy the second trophic level in a food chain

What are Herbivores?

300

This diagram shows how multiple food chains in an ecosystem are connected and overlap

What is a Food Web?

300

The amount of energy that will make it to the next feeding level 

What is 10%

300

Population growth trend only seen when a limiting factor is reached and populations stabilize 

What is Logistical Growth?

300

All interacting living and nonliving things in an area

What is an Ecosystem? 

400

This type of predator sits at the top of the food chain and is not hunted by any other organism

What is an Apex Predator?

400

When a predator eats prey and immediately reduces its population, it’s having this kind of effect on that species

What are Direct Effects?

400

Captured by producers through photosynthesis- all energy in an ecosystem ultimately enters as this

What is Solar Energy?

400

The total amount of individuals that an ecosystem can support with the current resources available 

What is Carrying Capacity?

400

All populations of all species living in an area

What is a Community?

500

The chain of direct and indirect effects that ripple through an ecosystem after a keystone species is added or removed is called this

What is a Trophic Cascade?

500

These organisms, such as fungi and bacteria, break down dead plants and animals and recycle nutrients

What is a Decomposer?

500

This molecule, produced during cellular respiration, stores and provides energy for cells

What is ATP or Cellular Energy?

500

Populations that remain stable, without rapid growth or decline, are said to be in this balanced condition

What is Homeostasis?

500

Tundras, deserts, and rainforests are examples of these large regions defined by climate, plants, and animals

What is a Biome?