Download Science 10 Test Review

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Biogeography wikipedia , lookup

Plant breeding wikipedia , lookup

Local food wikipedia , lookup

Overexploitation wikipedia , lookup

Allometry wikipedia , lookup

Plant defense against herbivory wikipedia , lookup

Perovskia atriplicifolia wikipedia , lookup

Ecosystem wikipedia , lookup

Ecology wikipedia , lookup

Theoretical ecology wikipedia , lookup

Renewable resource wikipedia , lookup

Habitat wikipedia , lookup

Food web wikipedia , lookup

Herbivore wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Science 10 Test Review
1. What is an ecosystem?
2. The fuel for ecosystems is…..
3. How does sunlight enter the food chain?
4. What are producers?
5. What are producers also known as?
6. What are consumers?
7. What are consumers also known as?
8. What are carnivores?
9. What are herbivores?
10. What are omnivores?
11. What do detritivores eat?
12. Give an example of a producer.
13. Give an example of a primary consumer.
14. Give an example of a secondary consumer.
15. Give an example of a tertiary consumer.
16. What produces more energy per unit of land area? Plants or
animals?
17. Write the formula for photosynthesis.
18. Write the formula for cellular respiration.
19. How much energy is transferred from one trophic level to the
next.
20. Define biotic, abiotic, interdependent.
21. Draw a pyramid of numbers, biomass, and energy for an
ecosystem.
22. Give an example of an upside down pyramid of numbers and
an example of an upside down pyramid of biomass.
23. What is biomass?
24. Why are there rarely more than four links in a food chain?
25. Explain how changes in one part of a food web affect
populations in other parts of the web.
26. Draw a four-link food chain.
27. What is carrying capacity?
28. Explain the J-curve and S-curve for populations.
29. List four factors that determine carrying capacity.
30. Give an example of intraspecific and interspecific competition.
31. Give an example of density-dependent and density independent
factors that affect population size.
32. How can overcrowding cause a reduction in population size?
33. What is productivity?
34. How is plant productivity affected by climate?
35. Give an example of a pesticide that is used to kill pests.
36. How can DDT spread through a food chain?
37. Why was DDT used to kill pests in the 1950’s and 1960’s?
38. What is biological magnification?
39. What is the relationship between DDT concentration and
trophic level?
40. If you ate 600 KJ of cabbage at lunch and cabbage produces
5200kJ/m2
how much land did it take to produce 600 kJ of cabbage?
41. Be able to construct a bar graph and label it correctly (title, x
and y axis)
42. Be able to find the average of a group of numbers.
43. Fill in the following chart. Remember, so organisms can be
in more than one category.
Organism
Trophic
Level
Tree
Dog
Rabbit
Human
Pig
Caterpillar
Fern
Dolphin
Whale
Flower
Seagull
Horse
Elephant
Grass
1st
Primary/Secondary/Tertiary Herbivore, Omnivore,
Consumer or Producer
Carnivore, Plant,
Detritivore
Producer
Plant
Test Review Answers
1. What is an ecosystem?
An ecosystem is all the organisms in an area that interact with each
other and with their environment of energy and matter
2. The fuel for ecosystems is….. the sun.
3. How does sunlight enter the food chain?
Sunlight is captured by green plants during photosynthesis and
stored as chemical energy in carbohydrate molecules. The energy
then passes from species to species when herbivores eat plants and
carnivores eat the herbivores.
4. What are producers?
Producers are organisms that make their own food.
5. What are producers also known as? Autotrophs
6. What are consumers?
Consumers are organisms that cannot make their own food and
must eat producers or other consumers.
7. What are consumers also known as? Heterotrophs
8. What are carnivores? Organisms that eat animals.
9. What are herbivores? Organisms that eat plants.
10. What are omnivores? Organisms that eat both plants and
animals.
11. What do detritivores eat? They feed off dead and decaying
organisms.
12. Give an example of a producer. Tree
13. Give an example of a primary consumer. Rabbit
14. Give an example of a secondary consumer. Fox
15. Give an example of a tertiary consumer. Human
16. What produces more energy per unit of land area? Plants
or animals? Plants produce more energy per unit of land area.
17. Write the formula for photosynthesis.
18. Write the formula for cellular respiration.
19. How much energy is transferred from one trophic level to
the next? 5-20%
20. Define biotic, abiotic, interdependent.
Biotic – living organisms
Abiotic – non-living organisms
Interdependent – depend on each other
21. Draw a pyramid of numbers, biomass, and energy for an
ecosystem.
22. Give an example of an upside down pyramid of numbers
and an example of an upside down pyramid of biomass.
Pyramid of numbers – beetle eating a tree
Pyramid of biomass – zooplankton eating phytoplankton
23. What is biomass?
Biomass is the total dry mass of a given population of organisms.
24. Why are there rarely more than four links in a food chain?
There is not enough energy passed from one level to the next
25. Explain how changes in one part of a food web affect
populations in other parts of the web.
If a species becomes extinct then whatever ate that species no
longer can eat that species, so it has to find something else to eat.
Once it eats a different species, then that species declines in
numbers which affects other organisms.
26. Draw a four-link food chain.
27. What is carrying capacity?
Carrying capacity is the largest population of a species that an
environment can support.
28. Explain the J-curve and S-curve for populations.
The J-curve shows that population will keep increasing forever if
there is enough resources available.
The S-curve shows that there is a maximum number of organisms
that an environment can support.
29. List four factors that determine carrying capacity.
Energy and materials, Food Chains, Competition, Density
30. Give an example of intraspecific and interspecific
competition.
Intraspecific competition – two deer fighting over apples
Interspecific competition – a wolf and a fox fighting over a rabbit
31. Give an example of density-dependent and density
independent factors that affect population size.
Density-dependent factors – disease, food shortage, sickness
Density-independent factors - flood, tornado, earthquake
32. How can overcrowding cause a reduction in population
size? If there is overcrowding then sickness, disease and starvation
tend to happen which causes the population size to decrease.
33. What is productivity? Productivity is the average amount of
new plant biomass produced each year per unit area
34. How is plant productivity affected by climate?
Warm, wet areas tend to have the highest levels of productivity.
Areas with low temperatures and little water tend to have the
lowest levels of productivity.
35. Give an example of a pesticide that is used to kill pests.DDT
36. How can DDT spread through a food chain?
Unfortunately, DDT continues to be used in some countries today
because it is such an effective pesticide. It not only affects species
living in these countries but it also affects species living elsewhere
in the world, including people who consume foods and food
imported from the tropics.
37. Why was DDT used to kill pests in the 1950’s and 1960’s?
During World War II, DDT was used to control populations of
insects that can transmit diseases to people. As a result, the rate of
death from malaria, bubonic plague, typhus and yellow fever
dropped dramatically.
38. What is biological magnification? The process of DDT
moving from producers to primary consumers and so on, and as
DDT moves up the trophic levels it increases in concentration it is
called biological magnification.
39. What is the relationship between DDT concentration and
trophic level? The higher the trophic level the higher the
concentration of DDT.
40. If you ate 600 KJ of cabbage at lunch and cabbage
produces 5200kJ/m2, how much land did it take to produce 600
kJ of cabbage?
600 KJ / 5200 kJ/m2 = 0.115 m2
Organism
Trophic
Level
Primary/Secondary/Tertiary Herbivore,
Consumer or Producer
Omnivore,
Carnivore, Plant,
Detritivore
Tree
Dog
Producer
Plant
Secondary Consumer
omnivore
Rabbit
Human
1st
2nd, 3rd,
4th
2nd
2,3,4
Herbivore
Omnivore
Pig
Caterpillar
Fern
Dolphin
2,3
2nd
1st
3, 4th
Primary
Primary/Secondary/Tertiary
Consumer
Primary/Secondary
Primary
Producer
Plant
Whale
2,3,4
Flower
Seagull
1st
2,3,4
Horse
Elephant
Grass
2nd
2nd
1st
Omnivore
Herbivore
Secondary/Tertiary
Carnivore
Consumer
Primary/Secondary/Tertiary Carnivore
Consumer
Producer
Plant
Primary/Secondary/Tertiary Detritivore
Consumer
Primary
Herbivore
Primary
Herbivore
Producer
Plant