Population Ecology
Carbon Cycle
Community Ecology
Food Webs
Wild Card!
100

They are non-living aspects of an ecosystem (pH, water, sunlight)

What are abiotic factors?

100

They are reservoirs that take in more carbon than they release

What are carbon sinks?


100

They have very restricted tolerance ranges and can only occupy very particular niche spaces

What are specialists?

100

They consume both primary producers and other consumers

What are omnivores?

100

It refers to the amount of energy reflected, determined by the surface material

What is albedo?

200

It's when organisms exit a population.

What is emigration?

200

It's the process that removes CO2 from the atmosphere

What is photosynthesis?

200

It occurs if there is a "winner" that completely prevents another species from using the resource

What is competitive exclusion?

200

They consume/break down nonliving organic matter like leaf litter, waste products, carcasses of animals

What are decomposers/detritivores?

200

It is a limiting factor where availability changes with population size

What is a density-dependent factor?

300

It's when population grows by a fixed percentage each year

What is exponential growth?

300

It adds CO2 to the atmosphere from the biosphere.

What is respiration by animals?

300
It's when both species benefit from the interaction

What is mutualism?

300

They use cellular respiration to make use of chemical energy from primary producers

What are consumers or heterotrophs?

300

It's when occurs when a disturbance completely removes all vegetation and life 

What is primary succession?

400

It's when life expectancy is low, so parents invest into having many offspring to improve the odds of some of them surviving long enough to reproduce 

What is r-selected reproduction?
400

They are reservoirs that release more carbon than they take in

What are carbon sinks?


400

It's the ability to survive and reproduce under changing environmental conditions

What is tolerance?

400

They have a disproportionately large impact on a community relative to their abundance

What is a keystone species?

400

It's when organisms live in groups or cluster around limited resources

What is clumped distribution?

500

Its the total # of individuals/area

What is population density?

500

This human activity increases CO2 in the atmosphere.

What is burning fossil fuels?

500

It's when one species benefits and another is unaffected.

What is commensalism?

500

It's an organism’s rank within its community’s feeding hierarchy

What is a trophic level?

500

What are Dr. Willett's cat's names?

Jiji and Bean!