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Ecology Test Review

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Last updated almost 3 years ago
12 questions
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Question 1
1.

Question 2
2.

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Question 3
3.

Question 4
4.

Question 5
5.

Question 6
6.

Question 7
7.

Question 8
8.

Question 9
9.

Question 10
10.

Question 11
11.

Question 12
12.

Use the Marine Food Chain below to categorize the description to the organism(s). You can use some cards more than once.

Phytoplankton
Carnivore
Secondary Consumer
Primary Consumer
Tertiary consumer
Zooplankton
herbivore
Consumers
Producer
A
B
C
D
E
Use the energy pyramid below to categorize the description to the organism(s).

Secodary Consumer
D
Producer
C
Tertiary Consumer
B
Primary Consumer
A
Arrange the amount of energy found in each trphic level. 1 being the producer and 4 being the tertiary consumer.
1.895
1895
18.95
189.5
Arrange the amount of energy found in each trphic level. 1 being the producer and 4 being the tertiary consumer.
120
1200
12
12000
Use the food web to answer the question

Which letter(s) represents the producer?
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
Use the food web to answer the question

Which letter(s) represents the herbivore?
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
Use the food web to answer the question

Which letter(s) represents the omnivore?
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
Use the food web to answer the question

The krill (letter C) is what level(s) of consumer?
Producer
1st level consumer
2nd level consumer
3rd level consumer
4th level consumer
5th level consumer
Use the food web to answer the question

The seal (letter F) is what level(s) of consumer?
Producer
1st level consumer
2nd level consumer
3rd level consumer
4th level consumer
5th level consumer
A food web better represents the flow of energy in nature than a tropic pyramid because organisms often eat across the levels of the tropic pyramid and organisms rarely eat only one thing or are eaten by one thing
True
False
What are the main decomposers in the ocean?
Fungi/mushrooms
Mold
Bacteria
All of the above
Categorize the descriptions as commensalism, mutualism and parasitism
Relationship where one benefits and the other has no effect.
Relationship where both the organisms benefits
Relationship where one benefits and the other is harmed.
Remora fish hitching a ride with a whale while enjoying the whale's protection
Clown fish lives in sea anemone. The clown fish gets protection from predetors while the anemone gets nutrients and becomes parasite free because of the clown fish.

Isopods enter through the gills of the clown fish as larvae, and attach themselves to the base of the fish's tongue. The isopods suck blood out of the tongue, which eventually withers - at which point the parasite becomes its permanent replacement.

Commensalism
Mutualism
Parasitism