Energy And Burning Nuts Resources 100 CC And LF EcosystemsFood Webs Population Estimation &...

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Transcript of Energy And Burning Nuts Resources 100 CC And LF EcosystemsFood Webs Population Estimation &...

Energy And

BurningNuts

Resources

100

CC And LF

EcosystemsFood Webs

PopulationEstimation

& Miscellaneous

500

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300

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200 200 200 200

300 300 300300

400 400 400 400

500 500 500500 500

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Final Jeopardy

This type of energy is stored in food.

BackANSWER: What is potential energy?

This unit is used to measure energy in food.

BackANSWER: What is a calorie?

A food Calorie is equal to this many scientific calories.

Back

ANSWER: What is 1000 scientific calories?

This is the formula used to calculate calories.

Back

ANSWER: What isMASS OF WATER x TEMPERATURE CHANGE

= calories?

We made this instrument in order to measure the calories in a peanut.

BackANSWER: What is a calorimeter?

Water is this type of resource.

Back

ANSWER: What is an essential resource?

Resources

100pts

This is the definition of a non-essential resource.

Back

ANSWER: What is a resource that is notneeded for survival?

Resources

200pts

Back

This is why the people of Rapa Nui were not able to sustain themselves.

ANSWER: What is they gradually deforested the land causing the soils to

be unsuitable for crop yield?

Resources

300pts

This is how a renewable and non-renewableresource differs.

Back

ANSWER: What is a renewable resource has an

unlimited supply whereas a non-renewable resource can not be replenished or is

replenished very slowly?

Resources

400pts

Using moving water(dam) to produce electricity is an example of this type of resource.

Back

ANSWER: What is renewable resource?

Resources

500pts

This organism forms the base of the food web and receives

its energy from the sun.

Back

ANSWER: What is a producer?

Food Webs

100

This organism feeds off of decaying matterand recycles it back to earth.

Back

ANSWER: What is a decomposer?

Food Webs

200

This is where a primary consumer gets its energy from.

Back

ANSWER: What is a producer?

Food Webs

300

Back

This organism can be considered a secondary and tertiary consumer.

ANSWER: What is a snake?

Food Webs

400

This organism is a secondary consumer.

Back

ANSWER: What is a frog, ladybug, snake, buzzard, and fox?

Food Webs

500

An ecosystem is made up of these two typesof factors.

Back

ANSWER: What is biotic and abiotic factors?

Ecosystems

100

32 inches of rainfall occurs in the midwest each year. This is an example of this type of factor.

Back

ANSWER: What is abiotic?

Ecosystems

200

This the definition of a population

Back

ANSWER: What is a group of organisms of the same species living in the same area at the same time?

Ecosystems

300

This is how a population and community differ.

Back

ANSWER: What is a community is ALLthe populations of organisms in a particular area?

Ecosystems

400

Back

ANSWER: What is a community is made up ofonly biotic factors whereas an ecosystem is made

up of biotic and abiotic factors?

This is how a community and ecosystem differ.

Ecosystems

500

This type of species is non-native to an area

and usually has detrimental effects on anEcosystem.

Back

ANSWER: What is an invasive species?

Population Estimation & Miscellaneous

100

This caused the birds of Guam to become extinct.

Back

ANSWER: What is the brown tree snakepreyed upon the birds and competed with the birds for food?

Population Estimation & Miscellaneous

200

This variable is purposefullyChanged in an experiment.

Back

ANSWER: What is independent variable?

Population Estimation & Miscellaneous

300

Back

This method was used to estimate the population of sea otters living in Glacier Bay.

ANSWER: What is the capture-tag-recapture method?

Population Estimation & Miscellaneous

400

This is the formula for estimating a populationof organisms.

Back

What is total tagged = # tagged in sample x total # captured in sample?

Population Estimation & Miscellaneous

500

Back

ANSWER: What is the number of organisms an ecosystem can support?

Carrying Capacity and Limiting Factors

100

Back

This is the definition of a density-dependent factor.

ANSWER: What is a limiting factor that depends on the population size?

Carrying Capacity and Limiting Factors

200

A disease spreads through a school of fish livingin Lake Michigan. This is an example of

this type of limiting factor.

Back

ANSWER: What density-independent factor?

Carrying Capacity and Limiting Factors

300

This is the carrying capacity from year 4 to

year 7.

Back

ANSWER: What is 100?

Carrying Capacity and Limiting Factors

400

How many years did this population stay at a carrying capacity of 200?

BackANSWER: What is 2 years?

Carrying Capacity and Limiting Factors

500

An initial population of 32 otters are captured and then released. 45 were captured in the second sample, 15 of

which were tagged. Estimate the population.

Back

ANSWER: What is 96 otters?

32 = 15 x 45