Module 1
The Science of Life
Module 2
The Chemistry of Life
Module 3 Ecology
Module 4
Cells
Misc
100

What is a hypothesis? 

A hypothesis is an educated guess or proposed explanation for something that can be tested and proven or disproved. 

100

What is the pH scale? What do the numbers represent? 

The pH scale measures how acidic or basic a substance is. 7 is neutral, below 7 is acidic and above 7 is basic

100

What biome is cold and dry with little precipitation and a permanently frozen layer of ground called permafrost. 

Tundra

100

Two solutions of different solute concentration are separated by a membrane. After a while, the water levels of the two solutions change. Has osmosis or diffusion taken place?

Since the water levels changed, that means solvent traveled from one side of the membrane to the other, but solute did not. This is osmosis.

100

What is an invasive species?

An invasive species is a non-native organism that can harm the environment, economy, or human health. 

200

What is a carnivore, herbivore, and omnivore? 

An animal or person that eats other animals (meat)

A animal that eats only plants.

An animal or person that eats food of both plant and animal origin.

200

How many atoms total are in a molecule of C4H8O2? What atoms are present and how many of each atom?

14 atoms total

4 carbon, 8 hydrogen and 2 oxygen

200

How are evaporation and transpiration related? 

Evaporation is the cycle where a liquid turns into a gas and transpiration is the evaporation of water from the leaves of a plant

200

Describe the differences between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. 

Eukaryotic cells have a membrane-bounded nucleus and membrane-bounded organelles that prokaryotic cells do not.

200

What is the process an autotroph uses to make its own food called?

Photosynthesis 

300

What is a heterotroph and an autotroph? 

A heterotroph is an organism that cannot produce its own food and must rely on other organisms for nutrition, while an autotroph is an organism that can create its own food

300

What determines the characteristics of an atom? 

It’s electrons, the electrons interact with other atoms in different ways. 

300

What is the trophic level of a flower? What is the trophic level of a bee that consumes nectar from that flower? What is the trophic level of a wasp that eats that bee?

Flower = producer

Bee= primary consumer

Wasp = secondary consumer

300

Which organelle in a cell contains its own DNA? 

Mitochondria

300

What chemical process occurs in chloroplasts?

Photosynthesis


400

What is the difference between an observation and an inference?

An observation is information you gather from your senses, an inference is an explanation for an observation you make.

400

What are the basic building blocks of proteins?

Amino acids

400

What are the 3 types of symbiotic relationships?

Mutualism, commensalism and parasitism.

400

What are the 3 main ideas of cell theory?

all living things are composed of cells; cells are the basic unit of structure and function; all cells come from pre-existing cells.

400

Give an example of prokaryotic cell and a eukaryotic cell.

Prokaryotic = bacteria

Eukaryotic- animals cells, plant cells, fungi, protozoa

500

What are the 6 criteria for life?

reproduction, growth and development, response to the environment, homeostasis, metabolism, and cellular organization

500

Describe 2 properties of water that allow life on earth to thrive.

Water is a universal solvent. Cohesion- water’s polarity allows it to attract other water molecules. Adhesion- water’s polarity allows it to attract other polar substances. Density- water can float as a solid. High heat capacity. 

500

What is the process called when an ecosystem has to “start over” after a natural disaster such as a volcanoe eruption? What is the term for the first organisms to come in and start colonizing?

Succession, pioneer species

500

What is the difference between passive and active transport? Give an example of each type.

Passive transport is the transport of molecule without using energy. Active transport requires the use of energy to move molecules. Examples of passive transport include diffusion, osmosis, and facilitated diffusion. Examples of active transport include endocytosis, exocytosis and pumps such as the sodium-potassium pump.

500

What does the atomic number of an element represent? 

The atomic number of an element represents the number of protons in the nucleus of an atom of that element.