Environmental Science Quiz

Ecology

The study of the interactions of living organisms with one another and with their environment

Biotic

Describes living factors in an environment

Abiotic

Describes the nonliving part of the environment, including water,rocks,light, and temperature.

5 levels of organization

Biosphere,ecosystem,community,population,organism

Population

a group of organisms of the same species that live in a specific geographical area

Community

all the populations of species that live in the same habitat and interact with one another

Ecosystem

a community of organisms and their abiotic environment

Biosphere

the part of earth where life exists

Producers

organisms that use sunlight directly to make food(ex. plants)

Decomposers

organisms that get energy by breaking down other dead organisms(ex.bacteria and fungi)

Consumers

organisms that eat other organisms (ex. Coyote)

herbivore

an organism that eats only plants

carnivore

an organism that eats animals

omnivore

an organism that eats both plants and animals

food chain

the pathway of energy transfer through various stages as a result of the feeding patterns of a series of organism

food web

a diagram that shows the feeding relationships between organisms in an ecosystem

energy pyramid

a triangular diagram that shows loss of energy, which results as energy passes through the ecosystem's food chain

carrying capacity

the largest population that an environment can support at any given time

prey

an organism that is killed and eaten by another organism

predator

an organism that eats all or part of another organism

symbiosis

a relationship in which two different organisms live in close association with each other

mutualism

a relationship between two species in which both species benefit

commensalism

a relationship between two organisms in which one organism benefits and the other is unaffected

parasitism

a relationship between two species in which one species, the parasite, benefits from the other species, the host, which is harmed

coevolution

The evolution of two or more species that is due to mutual influence, often in a way that makes the relationship more mutually beneficial