Deck 3: Ecosystems - What Are They and How Do They Work

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Question
The hydrologic cycle collects,purifies,and distributes the earth's fixed supply of water.​
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Question
Human activities affect the phosphorus cycle by greatly increasing the amount of phosphorus stored in the earth,reducing the amount available for plant growth.
Question
Raising fish in a series of aquariums under varied conditions is an example of field research.​
Question
Plants utilize a portion of their gross primary productivity (GPP)for respiration.
Question
Human activities have affected the sulfur cycle through the burning of sulfur-containing coal and oil.​
Question
Water contracts when it freezes,making ice more dense than water.​
Question
Sometimes ecologists carry out controlled experiments by isolating and changing a variable in part of an area and comparing the results with nearby unchanged areas.
Question
Only about 0.024% of the earth's vast water supply is available to humans and other species as liquid freshwater.​
Question
Despite the open ocean's low net primary productivity (NPP),it produces more of the earth's biomass per year than any other ecosystem or life zone.
Question
The process by which cells are able to convert glucose into useable energy using oxygen is known as aerobic transpiration.​
Question
Human activities affect the hydrologic cycle by making changes to the land surface that reduce infiltration and increase runoff.
Question
Water has the ability to filter out wavelengths of the sun's ultraviolet radiation that would harm some aquatic organisms.
Question
Water exists as a liquid over a wide range of temperatures because of the lack of attractive forces between its molecules.
Question
Detritivores are consumers that release nutrients from the dead bodies of living organisms and return them to the soil,water,and air.
Question
The amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is affected by the carbon cycle.
Question
Lightning is one of the natural mechanisms by which atmospheric nitrogen is converted to ammonia or ammonium ions.
Question
Omnivores are animals that feed only on the flesh of other animals.
Question
Because the earth does not get significant inputs of matter from space,its essentially fixed supply of nutrients must continually be recycled to support life.
Question
A deer is both a primary consumer and in the second trophic level.​
Question
Liquid water changes temperature quickly because only a small amount of heat is required to produce a large change in temperature.​
Question
Ozone gas,a chemical in the atmosphere that helps filter out harmful UV sunlight,is located in the troposphere.
Question
A group of individuals of the same species living in a particular place is a(n)____.​

A) ​species
B) ​population
C) ​community
D) ​organism
E) ​biome
Question
​Bacteria and fungi are typically categorized as ____.

A) ​autotrophs
B) ​producers
C) ​primary consumers
D) ​tertiary consumers
E) ​decomposers
Question
Life on earth depends on the ____ of ____ energy from the sun.​

A) ​cycling; high-quality
B) ​one-way flow; high-quality
C) ​cycling; low-quality
D) ​one-way flow; low-quality
E) ​one-way flow; ultraviolet
Question
Ecology is the study of how organisms can survive independently of one another by their dependence on matter and energy.
Question
Which of the following organisms can be called autotrophs?​

A) ​ants,termites,and butterflies
B) ​wolves,coyotes,and foxes
C) ​rabbits,moles,and robins
D) ​daisies,roses,and grass
E) ​mushrooms and fungi
Question
If the earth were an apple,the biosphere would be no thicker than the apple's skin.​
Question
Which of the following best represents the process of aerobic respiration?​

A) ​glucose + carbon dioxide → oxygen + water + energy
B) ​glucose + oxygen → carbon dioxide + water + energy
C) ​energy + oxygen → carbon dioxide + water + glucose
D) ​water + glucose → oxygen + carbon dioxide + energy
E) ​energy + glucose + oxygen → carbon dioxide + water
Question
Which of the following best represents the process of photosynthesis?​

A) ​carbon dioxide + glucose + solar energy → water + oxygen
B) ​carbon dioxide + water + solar energy → glucose + oxygen
C) ​oxygen + glucose + solar energy → carbon dioxide + water
D) ​oxygen + glucose → solar energy + carbon dioxide + water
E) ​carbon dioxide + water → solar energy + glucose + oxygen
Question
Gravity is one of the three factors that sustain life on the earth.
Question
Pronghorn antelope live in the high desert of the Great Basin in the western U.S.Which of the following items are possible abiotic factors that an antelope has to contend with?​

A) ​the density of the local population of coyotes
B) ​parasites such as ticks
C) ​competition with wild horses for sparse vegetation for forage
D) ​poisonous or thorny plants
E) ​extreme maximum and minimum temperatures in the desert
Question
The earth's life-support system consists of four main spherical systems-the air,water,living things,and ____.​

A) ​troposphere
B) ​biosphere
C) ​geosphere
D) ​hydrosphere
E) ​atmosphere
Question
Ecologists study interactions from the level of ____ to the level of ____.​

A) ​ecosystems; the biosphere
B) ​cells; ecosystems
C) ​organisms; the biosphere
D) ​populations; communities
E) ​atoms; populations
Question
​Producers can also be described as 'self-feeders',or ____.

A) ​autotrophs
B) ​tertiary
C) ​heterotrophs
D) ​detritivore
E) ​decomposer
Question
Ozone,a gas that filters out harmful ultraviolet (UV)radiation,is found in the ____.​

A) ​troposphere
B) ​geosphere
C) ​hydrosphere
D) ​stratosphere
E) ​biosphere
Question
​All of the water on or near the earth's surface (solid,liquid,and gas phases)comprises the ____.

A) ​atmosphere
B) ​geosphere
C) ​biosphere
D) ​troposphere
E) ​hydrosphere
Question
About how much energy is lost with each transfer from one trophic level to the next?​

A) ​0%
B) ​10%
C) ​35%
D) ​65%
E) ​90%
Question
A community of different species interacting with one another and with their nonliving (abiotic)environment of matter and energy is called a(n)____.

A) ​species
B) ​ecosystem
C) ​population
D) ​biosphere
E) ​community
Question
Given the nature of the carbon cycle,it is possible that a single atom of carbon that is in your skin could have once been part of your own great grandmother,or even a dinosaur.
Question
The air we breathe resides in the lowermost layer of the atmosphere called the ____.​

A) ​troposphere
B) ​stratosphere
C) ​ozone layer
D) ​geosphere
E) ​biosphere
Question
Phosphate can be lost from the phosphorus cycle for long periods of time when ____.​

A) ​phosphorus-containing fertilizer is applied to agricultural soil
B) ​bacteria convert it into a gas
C) ​exposed rocks containing phosphate are eroded by running water
D) ​it is taken up by plants
E) ​it is washed into the ocean and deposited as marine sediment
Question
Earthworms,some insects,and vultures are all examples of ____.​

A) ​producers
B) ​detritus feeders
C) ​decomposers
D) ​scavengers
E) ​secondary consumers
Question
If the biomass of flowers that support the butterflies was known to contain 100,000 units of energy,and certain bird species were eating the butterflies that foraged on the flowers,what amount of energy,on average,could be expected to be transferred to the birds?​

A) ​10
B) ​100
C) ​1,000
D) ​10,000
E) ​50,000
Question
​An organism can be described as a tertiary consumer if it eats ____.

A) ​detritivores
B) ​secondary producers
C) ​herbivores and carnivores
D) ​solely primary consumers
E) ​producers only
Question
Despite its low net primary productivity (NPP),the open ocean produces more of the earth's biomass per year than any other ecosystem or life zone because ____.​

A) ​growth is not limited by nutrient availability
B) ​whales are so large
C) ​of the enormous volume of the global ocean
D) ​more sunlight is available
E) ​there are fewer primary consumers
Question
Food chains and food webs show how producers,consumers,and decomposers are connected to one another as chemical energy flows through different ____ in an ecosystem.​

A) ​secondary producers
B) ​trophic levels
C) ​biospheres
D) ​the hydrologic cycle
E) ​abiotic components
Question
The chemical formula for the nitrogen gas in the atmosphere is ____.​

A) ​CN-
B) ​NO3-
C) ​N2
D) ​NH3
E) ​NH4+
Question
Carbon is cycled through the biosphere through ____.​

A) ​fuel combustion and decomposition
B) ​photosynthesis and aerobic respiration
C) ​soil bacteria and precipitation
D) ​volcanic activity and organic decay
E) ​the rock cycle
Question
​The most common gas in the atmosphere is ____.

A) ​nitrogen
B) ​carbon dioxide
C) ​oxygen
D) ​hydrogen
E) ​methane
Question
​____ can be classified as primary consumers.

A) ​Detritivores
B) ​Omnivores
C) ​Carnivores
D) ​Decomposers
E) ​Herbivores
Question
Of the following water cycle processes,the one working against gravity is​

A) ​percolation
B) ​infiltration
C) ​runoff
D) ​transpiration
E) ​precipitation
Question
One challenge of laboratory research is that ____.​

A) ​too many variables are uncontrolled
B) ​real organisms cannot be used
C) ​observations may not reflect what actually takes place in nature
D) ​field locations can be expensive and difficult to access
E) ​measurements are difficult to make in that environment
Question
Human activities have affected the sulfur cycle primarily by ____.​

A) ​producing carbon dioxide,which reacts with sulfur in the atmosphere
B) ​capturing sulfur emissions from volcanoes
C) ​converting sulfur into hydrogen sulfide gas
D) ​replenishing sulfur resources
E) ​releasing large amounts of sulfur dioxide (SO2)gas into the atmosphere
Question
​The coyotes would be classified as ____.

A) ​producers
B) ​primary consumers
C) ​secondary consumers
D) ​decomposers
E) ​tertiary consumers
Question
Nitrogen fixation is accomplished by ____.​

A) ​legumes
B) ​bacteria
C) ​algae
D) ​protozoa
E) ​round worms
Question
Geographic Information System (GIS)software allows scientists to ____.​

A) ​simulate real-world conditions in laboratory experiments
B) ​connect to the internet from remote locations in the field
C) ​connect to and control experiments in the field
D) ​capture,store,analyze,and display geographic data
E) ​simulate the behavior of ecosystems
Question
Unlike nitrogen or carbon,phosphorus ____.​

A) ​does not cycle through the atmosphere and it cycles more slowly
B) ​is not passed up the food chain to consumers
C) ​is not involved in plant growth
D) ​is plentiful and rarely limits primary productivity
E) ​cycling has not been affected by humans
Question
Groundwater found in layers of rock,sand,and gravel is called ____.​

A) ​underground lakes
B) ​aquifers
C) ​wetlands
D) ​basins
E) ​stocks
Question
Coyotes typically forage on mice and squirrels.However,as members of the canine family,Canidae,they also eat berries and parts of plants.As such,coyotes are classified as ____.​

A) ​herbivores
B) ​carnivores
C) ​omnivores
D) ​detritivores
E) ​producers
Question
Complex networks of interconnected food chains in ecosystems are best described as ____.​

A) ​food webs
B) nutrient cycling
C) ​trophic levels
D) ​pyramids of energy
E) ​trophic chains
Question
A primary consumer can also be described as a(n)____________________,a word that means "plant eater".
Question
Another word for an autotroph is a(n)____________________.
Question
Phytoplankton in the open ocean are examples of ____.​

A) ​producers
B) ​consumers
C) ​heterotrophs
D) ​detritivores
E) ​decomposers
Question
In the Sonoran desert of the southwestern United States, scientists observed that population clusters of a small cactus were pronounced around nests of desert woodrats. Given this spatial relationship, they began to think the woodrat was related to the seeding of these cactus plants.
After years of counting and observing woodrat nests and nearby cactus plants, scientists collected woodrat droppings for laboratory analysis to determine whether they contained cactus seeds. They also collected the droppings and transported them to other areas to see if this would bring about new population clusters of the cactus.
Scientists then programmed the data they had collected into a computer. A computer program enabled them to predict that increases in the woodrat population would result in corresponding increases in the cactus population, and likewise, a decrease in the number of woodrats would signal an impending decrease in cactus.

The transport of woodrat dropping to other areas could be described as ____.​

A) ​remote sensing
B) ​laboratory research
C) ​a controlled experiment
D) ​behavioral science
E) ​chemical analysis
Question
Water evaporates from the surfaces of plants through a process called ____.​

A) ​transpiration
B) ​respiration
C) ​runoff
D) ​infiltration
E) ​percolation
Question
A(n)____________________ consists of populations of different species living in a particular place and potentially interacting with each other.
Question
Bacteria are more important in the ____________________ than in the carbon or phosphorous cycles.
Question
A sequence of organisms,each of which serves as a source of nutrients or energy for the next,is called a(n)____________________.​
Question
Since the late 1960s,ecologists have developed mathematical ____________________ that simulate ecosystems.
Question
Net primary productivity (NPP)is the rate at which producers use photosynthesis to produce and store chemical energy minus ____.​

A) ​the rate at which they use some of this stored chemical energy through aerobic respiration
B) ​the amount of chemical energy they already have stored
C) ​the rate at which the producers are consumed
D) ​the average rate of photosynthesis in cloudy conditions
E) ​the average rate of photosynthesis among similar organisms
Question
In the Sonoran desert of the southwestern United States, scientists observed that population clusters of a small cactus were pronounced around nests of desert woodrats. Given this spatial relationship, they began to think the woodrat was related to the seeding of these cactus plants.
After years of counting and observing woodrat nests and nearby cactus plants, scientists collected woodrat droppings for laboratory analysis to determine whether they contained cactus seeds. They also collected the droppings and transported them to other areas to see if this would bring about new population clusters of the cactus.
Scientists then programmed the data they had collected into a computer. A computer program enabled them to predict that increases in the woodrat population would result in corresponding increases in the cactus population, and likewise, a decrease in the number of woodrats would signal an impending decrease in cactus.

Which statement best describes the scientists' initial observations?​

A) ​Woodrat nests had no apparent effect on cactus populations.
B) ​Cactus plants were less common in proximity to woodrat nests.
C) ​Cactus plants were more common in proximity to woodrat nests.
D) ​Woodrats were spreading cactus seeds.
E) ​The effect of woodrats on cactus plants was different from season to season.
Question
The oceans contain about ____ of the earth's water.​

A) ​38%
B) ​55%
C) ​71%
D) ​85%
E) ​97%
Question
____________________ makes up 78% of the volume of the atmosphere.
Question
Photosynthesis is performed by ____.​

A) ​heterotrophs
B) ​autotrophs
C) ​decomposers
D) ​detritivores
E) ​herbivores
Question
Oxygen accounts for about ____ of the air in the atmosphere.​

A) ​5%
B) ​21%
C) ​53%
D) ​66%
E) ​82%
Question
The ____________________ occupies those parts of the atmosphere,hydrosphere,and geosphere where life is found.​
Question
​Molecules of water are attracted to each other by ____.

A) ​neutron bonds
B) ​tension bonds
C) ​covalent bonds
D) ​hydrogen bonds
E) ​oxygen bonds
Question
In the Sonoran desert of the southwestern United States, scientists observed that population clusters of a small cactus were pronounced around nests of desert woodrats. Given this spatial relationship, they began to think the woodrat was related to the seeding of these cactus plants.
After years of counting and observing woodrat nests and nearby cactus plants, scientists collected woodrat droppings for laboratory analysis to determine whether they contained cactus seeds. They also collected the droppings and transported them to other areas to see if this would bring about new population clusters of the cactus.
Scientists then programmed the data they had collected into a computer. A computer program enabled them to predict that increases in the woodrat population would result in corresponding increases in the cactus population, and likewise, a decrease in the number of woodrats would signal an impending decrease in cactus.

Which phase of the study could be described as modeling?​

A) ​when the scientists gathered woodrat droppings for lab analysis
B) ​when the scientists determined from computer programs how woodrat nest numbers would impact cactus populations
C) ​when the scientists first observed the proximity of woodrat nests and cactus plants
D) ​when the scientists transported woodrat droppings to other areas
E) ​when the scientists first wondered whether or not woodrats were connected to the seeding of the cactus plants
Question
Carnivores such as tigers,hawks and killer whales that feed on the flesh of other carnivores are known as _______________ consumers.​
Question
Precipitation that infiltrates through soil into underground layers of rock,sand,and gravel is stored as ____________________.​
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Deck 3: Ecosystems - What Are They and How Do They Work
1
The hydrologic cycle collects,purifies,and distributes the earth's fixed supply of water.​
True
2
Human activities affect the phosphorus cycle by greatly increasing the amount of phosphorus stored in the earth,reducing the amount available for plant growth.
False
3
Raising fish in a series of aquariums under varied conditions is an example of field research.​
False
4
Plants utilize a portion of their gross primary productivity (GPP)for respiration.
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5
Human activities have affected the sulfur cycle through the burning of sulfur-containing coal and oil.​
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6
Water contracts when it freezes,making ice more dense than water.​
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7
Sometimes ecologists carry out controlled experiments by isolating and changing a variable in part of an area and comparing the results with nearby unchanged areas.
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8
Only about 0.024% of the earth's vast water supply is available to humans and other species as liquid freshwater.​
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9
Despite the open ocean's low net primary productivity (NPP),it produces more of the earth's biomass per year than any other ecosystem or life zone.
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10
The process by which cells are able to convert glucose into useable energy using oxygen is known as aerobic transpiration.​
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11
Human activities affect the hydrologic cycle by making changes to the land surface that reduce infiltration and increase runoff.
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12
Water has the ability to filter out wavelengths of the sun's ultraviolet radiation that would harm some aquatic organisms.
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13
Water exists as a liquid over a wide range of temperatures because of the lack of attractive forces between its molecules.
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14
Detritivores are consumers that release nutrients from the dead bodies of living organisms and return them to the soil,water,and air.
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15
The amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is affected by the carbon cycle.
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16
Lightning is one of the natural mechanisms by which atmospheric nitrogen is converted to ammonia or ammonium ions.
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17
Omnivores are animals that feed only on the flesh of other animals.
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18
Because the earth does not get significant inputs of matter from space,its essentially fixed supply of nutrients must continually be recycled to support life.
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19
A deer is both a primary consumer and in the second trophic level.​
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20
Liquid water changes temperature quickly because only a small amount of heat is required to produce a large change in temperature.​
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21
Ozone gas,a chemical in the atmosphere that helps filter out harmful UV sunlight,is located in the troposphere.
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22
A group of individuals of the same species living in a particular place is a(n)____.​

A) ​species
B) ​population
C) ​community
D) ​organism
E) ​biome
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23
​Bacteria and fungi are typically categorized as ____.

A) ​autotrophs
B) ​producers
C) ​primary consumers
D) ​tertiary consumers
E) ​decomposers
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24
Life on earth depends on the ____ of ____ energy from the sun.​

A) ​cycling; high-quality
B) ​one-way flow; high-quality
C) ​cycling; low-quality
D) ​one-way flow; low-quality
E) ​one-way flow; ultraviolet
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25
Ecology is the study of how organisms can survive independently of one another by their dependence on matter and energy.
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26
Which of the following organisms can be called autotrophs?​

A) ​ants,termites,and butterflies
B) ​wolves,coyotes,and foxes
C) ​rabbits,moles,and robins
D) ​daisies,roses,and grass
E) ​mushrooms and fungi
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27
If the earth were an apple,the biosphere would be no thicker than the apple's skin.​
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28
Which of the following best represents the process of aerobic respiration?​

A) ​glucose + carbon dioxide → oxygen + water + energy
B) ​glucose + oxygen → carbon dioxide + water + energy
C) ​energy + oxygen → carbon dioxide + water + glucose
D) ​water + glucose → oxygen + carbon dioxide + energy
E) ​energy + glucose + oxygen → carbon dioxide + water
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29
Which of the following best represents the process of photosynthesis?​

A) ​carbon dioxide + glucose + solar energy → water + oxygen
B) ​carbon dioxide + water + solar energy → glucose + oxygen
C) ​oxygen + glucose + solar energy → carbon dioxide + water
D) ​oxygen + glucose → solar energy + carbon dioxide + water
E) ​carbon dioxide + water → solar energy + glucose + oxygen
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30
Gravity is one of the three factors that sustain life on the earth.
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31
Pronghorn antelope live in the high desert of the Great Basin in the western U.S.Which of the following items are possible abiotic factors that an antelope has to contend with?​

A) ​the density of the local population of coyotes
B) ​parasites such as ticks
C) ​competition with wild horses for sparse vegetation for forage
D) ​poisonous or thorny plants
E) ​extreme maximum and minimum temperatures in the desert
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32
The earth's life-support system consists of four main spherical systems-the air,water,living things,and ____.​

A) ​troposphere
B) ​biosphere
C) ​geosphere
D) ​hydrosphere
E) ​atmosphere
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33
Ecologists study interactions from the level of ____ to the level of ____.​

A) ​ecosystems; the biosphere
B) ​cells; ecosystems
C) ​organisms; the biosphere
D) ​populations; communities
E) ​atoms; populations
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34
​Producers can also be described as 'self-feeders',or ____.

A) ​autotrophs
B) ​tertiary
C) ​heterotrophs
D) ​detritivore
E) ​decomposer
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35
Ozone,a gas that filters out harmful ultraviolet (UV)radiation,is found in the ____.​

A) ​troposphere
B) ​geosphere
C) ​hydrosphere
D) ​stratosphere
E) ​biosphere
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36
​All of the water on or near the earth's surface (solid,liquid,and gas phases)comprises the ____.

A) ​atmosphere
B) ​geosphere
C) ​biosphere
D) ​troposphere
E) ​hydrosphere
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37
About how much energy is lost with each transfer from one trophic level to the next?​

A) ​0%
B) ​10%
C) ​35%
D) ​65%
E) ​90%
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38
A community of different species interacting with one another and with their nonliving (abiotic)environment of matter and energy is called a(n)____.

A) ​species
B) ​ecosystem
C) ​population
D) ​biosphere
E) ​community
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39
Given the nature of the carbon cycle,it is possible that a single atom of carbon that is in your skin could have once been part of your own great grandmother,or even a dinosaur.
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40
The air we breathe resides in the lowermost layer of the atmosphere called the ____.​

A) ​troposphere
B) ​stratosphere
C) ​ozone layer
D) ​geosphere
E) ​biosphere
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41
Phosphate can be lost from the phosphorus cycle for long periods of time when ____.​

A) ​phosphorus-containing fertilizer is applied to agricultural soil
B) ​bacteria convert it into a gas
C) ​exposed rocks containing phosphate are eroded by running water
D) ​it is taken up by plants
E) ​it is washed into the ocean and deposited as marine sediment
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42
Earthworms,some insects,and vultures are all examples of ____.​

A) ​producers
B) ​detritus feeders
C) ​decomposers
D) ​scavengers
E) ​secondary consumers
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43
If the biomass of flowers that support the butterflies was known to contain 100,000 units of energy,and certain bird species were eating the butterflies that foraged on the flowers,what amount of energy,on average,could be expected to be transferred to the birds?​

A) ​10
B) ​100
C) ​1,000
D) ​10,000
E) ​50,000
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44
​An organism can be described as a tertiary consumer if it eats ____.

A) ​detritivores
B) ​secondary producers
C) ​herbivores and carnivores
D) ​solely primary consumers
E) ​producers only
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45
Despite its low net primary productivity (NPP),the open ocean produces more of the earth's biomass per year than any other ecosystem or life zone because ____.​

A) ​growth is not limited by nutrient availability
B) ​whales are so large
C) ​of the enormous volume of the global ocean
D) ​more sunlight is available
E) ​there are fewer primary consumers
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46
Food chains and food webs show how producers,consumers,and decomposers are connected to one another as chemical energy flows through different ____ in an ecosystem.​

A) ​secondary producers
B) ​trophic levels
C) ​biospheres
D) ​the hydrologic cycle
E) ​abiotic components
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47
The chemical formula for the nitrogen gas in the atmosphere is ____.​

A) ​CN-
B) ​NO3-
C) ​N2
D) ​NH3
E) ​NH4+
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48
Carbon is cycled through the biosphere through ____.​

A) ​fuel combustion and decomposition
B) ​photosynthesis and aerobic respiration
C) ​soil bacteria and precipitation
D) ​volcanic activity and organic decay
E) ​the rock cycle
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49
​The most common gas in the atmosphere is ____.

A) ​nitrogen
B) ​carbon dioxide
C) ​oxygen
D) ​hydrogen
E) ​methane
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50
​____ can be classified as primary consumers.

A) ​Detritivores
B) ​Omnivores
C) ​Carnivores
D) ​Decomposers
E) ​Herbivores
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51
Of the following water cycle processes,the one working against gravity is​

A) ​percolation
B) ​infiltration
C) ​runoff
D) ​transpiration
E) ​precipitation
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52
One challenge of laboratory research is that ____.​

A) ​too many variables are uncontrolled
B) ​real organisms cannot be used
C) ​observations may not reflect what actually takes place in nature
D) ​field locations can be expensive and difficult to access
E) ​measurements are difficult to make in that environment
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53
Human activities have affected the sulfur cycle primarily by ____.​

A) ​producing carbon dioxide,which reacts with sulfur in the atmosphere
B) ​capturing sulfur emissions from volcanoes
C) ​converting sulfur into hydrogen sulfide gas
D) ​replenishing sulfur resources
E) ​releasing large amounts of sulfur dioxide (SO2)gas into the atmosphere
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54
​The coyotes would be classified as ____.

A) ​producers
B) ​primary consumers
C) ​secondary consumers
D) ​decomposers
E) ​tertiary consumers
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55
Nitrogen fixation is accomplished by ____.​

A) ​legumes
B) ​bacteria
C) ​algae
D) ​protozoa
E) ​round worms
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56
Geographic Information System (GIS)software allows scientists to ____.​

A) ​simulate real-world conditions in laboratory experiments
B) ​connect to the internet from remote locations in the field
C) ​connect to and control experiments in the field
D) ​capture,store,analyze,and display geographic data
E) ​simulate the behavior of ecosystems
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57
Unlike nitrogen or carbon,phosphorus ____.​

A) ​does not cycle through the atmosphere and it cycles more slowly
B) ​is not passed up the food chain to consumers
C) ​is not involved in plant growth
D) ​is plentiful and rarely limits primary productivity
E) ​cycling has not been affected by humans
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58
Groundwater found in layers of rock,sand,and gravel is called ____.​

A) ​underground lakes
B) ​aquifers
C) ​wetlands
D) ​basins
E) ​stocks
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59
Coyotes typically forage on mice and squirrels.However,as members of the canine family,Canidae,they also eat berries and parts of plants.As such,coyotes are classified as ____.​

A) ​herbivores
B) ​carnivores
C) ​omnivores
D) ​detritivores
E) ​producers
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60
Complex networks of interconnected food chains in ecosystems are best described as ____.​

A) ​food webs
B) nutrient cycling
C) ​trophic levels
D) ​pyramids of energy
E) ​trophic chains
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61
A primary consumer can also be described as a(n)____________________,a word that means "plant eater".
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62
Another word for an autotroph is a(n)____________________.
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63
Phytoplankton in the open ocean are examples of ____.​

A) ​producers
B) ​consumers
C) ​heterotrophs
D) ​detritivores
E) ​decomposers
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64
In the Sonoran desert of the southwestern United States, scientists observed that population clusters of a small cactus were pronounced around nests of desert woodrats. Given this spatial relationship, they began to think the woodrat was related to the seeding of these cactus plants.
After years of counting and observing woodrat nests and nearby cactus plants, scientists collected woodrat droppings for laboratory analysis to determine whether they contained cactus seeds. They also collected the droppings and transported them to other areas to see if this would bring about new population clusters of the cactus.
Scientists then programmed the data they had collected into a computer. A computer program enabled them to predict that increases in the woodrat population would result in corresponding increases in the cactus population, and likewise, a decrease in the number of woodrats would signal an impending decrease in cactus.

The transport of woodrat dropping to other areas could be described as ____.​

A) ​remote sensing
B) ​laboratory research
C) ​a controlled experiment
D) ​behavioral science
E) ​chemical analysis
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65
Water evaporates from the surfaces of plants through a process called ____.​

A) ​transpiration
B) ​respiration
C) ​runoff
D) ​infiltration
E) ​percolation
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66
A(n)____________________ consists of populations of different species living in a particular place and potentially interacting with each other.
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67
Bacteria are more important in the ____________________ than in the carbon or phosphorous cycles.
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68
A sequence of organisms,each of which serves as a source of nutrients or energy for the next,is called a(n)____________________.​
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69
Since the late 1960s,ecologists have developed mathematical ____________________ that simulate ecosystems.
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70
Net primary productivity (NPP)is the rate at which producers use photosynthesis to produce and store chemical energy minus ____.​

A) ​the rate at which they use some of this stored chemical energy through aerobic respiration
B) ​the amount of chemical energy they already have stored
C) ​the rate at which the producers are consumed
D) ​the average rate of photosynthesis in cloudy conditions
E) ​the average rate of photosynthesis among similar organisms
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71
In the Sonoran desert of the southwestern United States, scientists observed that population clusters of a small cactus were pronounced around nests of desert woodrats. Given this spatial relationship, they began to think the woodrat was related to the seeding of these cactus plants.
After years of counting and observing woodrat nests and nearby cactus plants, scientists collected woodrat droppings for laboratory analysis to determine whether they contained cactus seeds. They also collected the droppings and transported them to other areas to see if this would bring about new population clusters of the cactus.
Scientists then programmed the data they had collected into a computer. A computer program enabled them to predict that increases in the woodrat population would result in corresponding increases in the cactus population, and likewise, a decrease in the number of woodrats would signal an impending decrease in cactus.

Which statement best describes the scientists' initial observations?​

A) ​Woodrat nests had no apparent effect on cactus populations.
B) ​Cactus plants were less common in proximity to woodrat nests.
C) ​Cactus plants were more common in proximity to woodrat nests.
D) ​Woodrats were spreading cactus seeds.
E) ​The effect of woodrats on cactus plants was different from season to season.
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72
The oceans contain about ____ of the earth's water.​

A) ​38%
B) ​55%
C) ​71%
D) ​85%
E) ​97%
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73
____________________ makes up 78% of the volume of the atmosphere.
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74
Photosynthesis is performed by ____.​

A) ​heterotrophs
B) ​autotrophs
C) ​decomposers
D) ​detritivores
E) ​herbivores
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75
Oxygen accounts for about ____ of the air in the atmosphere.​

A) ​5%
B) ​21%
C) ​53%
D) ​66%
E) ​82%
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76
The ____________________ occupies those parts of the atmosphere,hydrosphere,and geosphere where life is found.​
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77
​Molecules of water are attracted to each other by ____.

A) ​neutron bonds
B) ​tension bonds
C) ​covalent bonds
D) ​hydrogen bonds
E) ​oxygen bonds
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78
In the Sonoran desert of the southwestern United States, scientists observed that population clusters of a small cactus were pronounced around nests of desert woodrats. Given this spatial relationship, they began to think the woodrat was related to the seeding of these cactus plants.
After years of counting and observing woodrat nests and nearby cactus plants, scientists collected woodrat droppings for laboratory analysis to determine whether they contained cactus seeds. They also collected the droppings and transported them to other areas to see if this would bring about new population clusters of the cactus.
Scientists then programmed the data they had collected into a computer. A computer program enabled them to predict that increases in the woodrat population would result in corresponding increases in the cactus population, and likewise, a decrease in the number of woodrats would signal an impending decrease in cactus.

Which phase of the study could be described as modeling?​

A) ​when the scientists gathered woodrat droppings for lab analysis
B) ​when the scientists determined from computer programs how woodrat nest numbers would impact cactus populations
C) ​when the scientists first observed the proximity of woodrat nests and cactus plants
D) ​when the scientists transported woodrat droppings to other areas
E) ​when the scientists first wondered whether or not woodrats were connected to the seeding of the cactus plants
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79
Carnivores such as tigers,hawks and killer whales that feed on the flesh of other carnivores are known as _______________ consumers.​
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80
Precipitation that infiltrates through soil into underground layers of rock,sand,and gravel is stored as ____________________.​
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