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Test your basic knowledge |
PCAT Biology Ecology
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
pcat
,
biology
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Distinct community in a geographic region
Biome
Environment
Photic Zone animals
Grassland Animals
2. Autotrophic green plants and chemosynthetic bacteria that use the energy of the sun and simple raw materials to manufacture carbohydrates - proteins - and lipids
Niche
Producers
Primary Consumers
Freshwater Biomes
3. Live in burrows had few birds and mammals are found except those which have developed adaptations for maintaining constant body temperatures
Symbionts
Thundra Animals
Nekton
Desert animals
4. Nutrients - water - and sunlight limitations aid in maintaining populations at relatively constant levels
Thundra Animals
Temperate Deciduous Forest Biome
Biome
Environmental Factors
5. Includes all portions of the planet that support life -the atmosphere - the lithosphere - and the hydrosphere
Biosphere
Material Cycles
Nitrogen
Temperate Deciduous Forest Plants
6. Freshwater Biomes vs. Saltwater 3: Freshwater biomes - except very large lakes - are affected by variations in _________. temperature of freshwater bodies varies considerably; they may freeze or dry up - and mud from their floors may be stirred up by
Physical Environment-Temperature
Niche
Decomposer
Climate and weather
7. Jungles characterized by high temperatures and torrential rains -found in Central Africa - Central America - the Amazon basic - and Southeast Asia
Temperate Deciduous Forest Biome
Food Pyramids
Physical Environment- Water
Tropical Rain Forest Biome
8. Region on the continental shelf that contains ocean area with depths up to 600 feet and extends several hundred miles from the shores
Tertiary Consumers
Littoral Zone
Herbivores
Temperate Coniferous Plants
9. Without a constant input of energy from the sun - an ecosystem would soon run down - as food is transferred from one level of the food chain to the next - a transfer of energy occurs
Photic Zone animals
Food Pyramids
Tertiary Consumers
Decomposer
10. Composed of populations that are able to exist under the new conditions
Successive Communities
Polar Region
Aphotic Zone
Dominant Species
11. Animals that consume primary consumers (carnivores)
Obligatory
Secondary Consumers
Lithosphere
Environment
12. The stable - living part of the ecosystem in whicih populations exist in balance with each other and with the environment
Omnivores
Marshes
Climax Community
Second Law of Thermodynamics
13. Animals eat plants and use the digested nutrients to form carbohydrates - fats - and proteins characteristic of the species. a part of these organic compounds is used as fuel in respiration in plants and animals
Carbon Cycle 2
Grassland Animals
Communities
Physical Environment-Sunlight
14. Links between oceans and land
Biome
Marshes
Community
Osmoregulation
15. The chief disruptive force
Producers
Competition
Scavengers
Biome
16. Have adaptations enabling them to survive in very cod water - with high pressures - and in complete darkness
Aphotic Zone
Nitrogen Cycle 3
Littoral Zone
Deep-sea Organisms
17. Conserve water actively
Competition
Nekton
Desert Plants
Autotrophs
18. Animals that consume only plants or plant foods
Deep-sea Organisms
Environmental Factors
Herbivores
Physical Environment-Sunlight
19. One or both organisms can't survive without the other
Hydrosphere
Obligatory
Grassland Biome
Desert animals
20. Active swimmers such as fish - sharks - or whales that feed on plankton and smaller fish
Food Pyramids
Marine Biomes
Nekton
Commensalism
21. The orderly process by which one biotic community replaces or succeeds another until a climax community is established
Temperate Deciduous Forest Biome
Ecology
Ecological Succession
Saprophytes
22. Consumer organisms that are higher in hte food chain are usually larger and heavier than those further down
Grassland Biome
Pyramid of Numbers
Food Chain
Ecological Succession
23. When a parasite benefits at the expense of the host
Nitrogen cycle 1
Species
Rootlike holdfasts
Parasitism
24. Elemental nitrogen is chemically inert and cannot be used by most organisms. Lightning and nitrogen-fixing bacteria in the roots of legumes change the nitrogen into the usable - soluble nitrates
Nitrogen cycle 1
Deep-sea Organisms
Temperate Deciduous Forest Animals
Tundra Biome
25. Evolve toward a balance in which the predator is a regulatory influence on th prey but not a threat to its survival
Predator-Prey relationship
Dominant Species
Communities
Taiga Animals
26. Animals that consume green plants (herbivores)
Tropical Rain Forest Plants
Photic Zone animals
Primary Consumers
Dentrified
27. Used to include only the population and not their physical environment
Biotic Community
Physical Environment-Sunlight
Littoral Zone
Commensalism
28. Group of organisms of the same species living together in a given location
Food Pyramids
Species
Population
Climate and weather
29. Rhododendrons and pines are more suited for growth in acid oil
Substratum-pH
Temperate Coniferous Plants
Competition Same Niche 3
Temperate Deciduous Forest Animals
30. Rivers - lakes - ponds - and marshes
Communities
Freshwater Biomes
Deep-sea Organisms
Parasitism
31. Region typical of the open seas and can be divided into photic and aphotic zones
Rootlike holdfasts
Polar Region
Pelagic Zone
Primary Consumers
32. Animals that consume dead animals
Nature of Biomes
Lithosphere
Nitrified
Scavengers
33. One species may be competitively superior to the other and drive the second to extinction
Climax Community
Competition Same Niche
Littoral Zone
Deep-sea Organisms
34. One that exerts control over the other species that are present
Dominant Species
Tundra Plants
Marine Biomes
Herbivores
35. Determined by the same decisive factors-temperatures and rainfall
Hemeothermic (Warm Blooded)
Omnivores
Polar Region
Nature of Biomes
36. Region exposed to low tides that undergoes variations in temperature and periods of dryness
Intertidal Zone
Physical Environment-Sunlight
Pioneer Organism
Competition Same Niche 3
37. Determines water holding capacity
Grassland Biome
Substratum-texture
Poikilothermic (Cold Blooded)
Taiga Animals
38. Frozen area with no vegetation and terrestrial animals -animals that do inhabit polar regions generally live near the polar oceans
Polar Region
Climate and weather
Temperate Deciduous Forest Plants
Predator-Prey relationship
39. Include saprophytic organisms and organisms of decay
Saprophytes
Decomposer
Nitrogen cycle 1
Substratum-Minerals
40. Trees such as beech - maple - oaks - and willows shed their leaves during cold winters months
Temperate Deciduous Forest Plants
Desert Biome
Food Pyramids
Grassland Animals
41. Two fates await the ammonia (NH3). some are nitrified or dentrified
Food Web
Nitrogen cycle 1
Nitrogen Cycle 5
Littoral Zone Populations
42. Every energy transfer involves a loss of energy and each level of the food chain uses some of the energy it obtains from the food for its own metabolism and loses some additional energy in the form of heat
Temperate Deciduous Forest Animals
Second Law of Thermodynamics
Biotic Environment
Primary Consumers
43. Integrated system of species that are dependent upon one another for survival
Omnivores
Community
Coimax Vegetatioin
Population
44. An essential component of amino acids and nucleic acids - which are the building blocks of all living things
Tropical Rain Forest Animals
Food Chain
Nitrogen
Hydrosphere
45. Polar bears - musk oxen - and arctic hens
Pyramid of Energy
Intertidal Zone
Saprophytes
Thundra Animals
46. Nekton and benthos - scavengers - and predators (fiercely competitive)
Temperate Coniferous Forest Biome
Grassland Biome
Environmental Factors
Aphotic Zone animals
47. The study of interactions between organisms and their environment
Autotrophs
Ecology
Material Cycles
Desert animals
48. Contains plankton - passively drifting masses of microscopic photosynthetic and heterotrophic organisms - and nekton - and algae
Photic Zone animals
Carbon Cycle 3
Nitrogen
Desert Biome
49. The nitrogen locked up in the wastes and dead tissues is released by the action of the bacteria of decay - which convert the proteins into ammonia
Niche
Nitrogen Cycle 5
Nitrogen Cycle 4
Nitrogen cycle 1
50. Animals that eat both plants and animals
Desert animals
Photic Zone
Saprophytes
Omnivores