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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. Adaptations for maintaining their internal osmolarity and conserving water
Osmoregulation
Obligatory
Physical Environment- Water
Ecology
2. Encompasses all that is external to the organism and is necessary for its existence
Environment
Heterotrophs
Parasitism
Intertidal Zone
3. Receive less rainfall than the temperate forests - have long - cold winters - and are inhabited by single coniferous tree-the spruce -extreme northern parts of Canada and Russia
Taiga Biome
Food Web
Commensalism
Competition Same Niche 2
4. Consists of populations of different plants and animal species interacting with each other in a given environment
Successive Communities
Communities
Dominant Species
Ecology
5. Composed of populations that are able to exist under the new conditions
Organism
Successive Communities
Aquatic Biomes
Grassland Biome
6. Consumer organisms that are higher in hte food chain are usually larger and heavier than those further down
Conditions for stability in an Ecosystem
Pyramid of Numbers
Carbon Cycle 1
Obligatory
7. Affect the type of vegetation that can be supported
Carbon Cycle 2
Photic zone
Successive Communities
Substratum-Minerals
8. Used to include only the population and not their physical environment
Niche
Biotic Community
Temperate Deciduous Forest Biome
Intertidal Zone Population
9. Vegetation such as vines and eppiphytes
Nitrogen
Marine Biomes
Tropical Rain Forest Plants
Tropical Rain Forest Biome
10. Cannot synthesize their ow food and must depend upon autotrophs or others in the ecosystem to obtain their food
Grassland Animals
Temperate Coniferous Forest Biome
Food Pyramids
Heterotrophs
11. Individual unit of an ecological system - but the organism itself is composed of smaller units -organs >tissues >cells >molecules >atoms > subatomic particles
Pyramid of Mass
Tropical Rain Forest Biome
Commensalism
Organism
12. Nekton and benthos - scavengers - and predators (fiercely competitive)
Community
Biome
Aphotic Zone animals
Predators
13. Animals that consume dead animals
Epiphytes
Communities
Scavengers
Nekton
14. Two species may rapidly evolve in divergent directions under the strong selection pressure resulting from intense competition. thus - the two species would rapidly evolve greater differences in their niches
Community
Epiphytes
Competition Same Niche 3
Tertiary Consumers
15. One or both organisms can't survive without the other
Species
Obligatory
Food Web
Symbionts
16. Energy is transferred from the original sources in green plants through a series o organisms with repeated stages of consumption and finally decomposition
Species
Substratum-pH
Food Chain
Ecological Succession
17. One that exerts control over the other species that are present
Dominant Species
Littoral Zone Populations
Physical Environment-Temperature
Substratum (soil/rock)
18. (living) includes all living things that directly or indirectly influence the life of the organism including the relationships that exist between organisms
Environment
Poikilothermic (Cold Blooded)
Herbivores
Biotic Environment
19. Plants growing on other plants - trees grow closely together; sunlight hardly reaches the forest floor
Sere
Lithosphere
Epiphytes
Biome
20. Lichens and moss
Deep-sea Organisms
Tundra Plants
Hydrosphere
Desert animals
21. Forest floors contain moss and lichens
Polar Region
Photic Zone
Tropical Rain Forest Animals
Taiga Plants
22. The stable - living part of the ecosystem in whicih populations exist in balance with each other and with the environment
Carbon Cycle 3
Secondary Consumers
Epiphytes
Climax Community
23. Includes the community and the environment and usually all five kingdoms
Herbivores
Ecosystem
Physical Environment- Water
Littoral Zone
24. The major component of the internal environment of all living things
Obligatory
Physical Environment- Water
Predators
Nitrogen cycle 1
25. Each member of a food chain uses some of the energy it obtains from its food for its own metabolism and loses some additional energy in the form of heat
Cohesive Force
Temperate Deciduous Forest Plants
Tundra Biome
Pyramid of Energy
26. Algae - crabs - crustacea - and many different species of fish
Littoral Zone
Littoral Zone Populations
Desert Plants
Photic zone
27. Animals that feed on secondary consumer
Food Chain
Biotic Environment
Ecology
Tertiary Consumers
28. Include saprophytic organisms and organisms of decay
Decomposer
Thundra Animals
Freshwater Biomes
Autotrophs
29. Includes climate - temperature - availability of light and water - and the local topology
Aquatic Biomes
Herbivores
Abiotic (Physical) Environment
Dominant Species
30. Community in an ecological succession is identified by a dominant species
Photic Zone animals
Tertiary Consumers
Sere
Biosphere
31. Determines water holding capacity
Polar Region
Hydrosphere
Nature of Biomes
Substratum-texture
32. Ammonia (NH3) is broken down to release free nitrogen - which returns to the beginning of the denitrifying
Temperate Coniferous Forest Biome
Dentrified
Parasitism
Desert animals
33. Polar bears - musk oxen - and arctic hens
Thundra Animals
Food Pyramids
Symbionts
Pioneer Organism
34. Made into nitrites by chemosynthetic bacteria and then to usable nitrates by nitrifying bacteria
Taiga Animals
Producers
Nitrified
Saprophytes
35. One species may be competitively superior to the other and drive the second to extinction
Pyramid of Numbers
Environment
Competition Same Niche
Biosphere
36. More than 70% of earth -plants have little controlling influence in communities -most stable ecosystems; the conditions affecting temperature - amount of available oxygen and cabon dioxide - and amount of suspended or dissolve materials are very stab
Tropical Rain Forest Biome
Intraspecific Interactions
Aquatic Biomes
Substratum-texture
37. Freshwater Biomes vs. Saltwater 1: Freshwater is _______________ which results in the passage of water into the cell. Freshwater organisms have homeostatic mechanisms to maintain water balance by the regular removal of the excess water. these include
Physical Environment-Sunlight
Commensalism
Photic zone
Hypotonic
38. The vegetation that becomes dominant and stable after years of evolutiionary development
Desert Plants
Physical Environment-Sunlight
Coimax Vegetatioin
Environmental Factors
39. Oceans connect to form one continuous body of water - which controls the earth's temperature by absorbing solar heat
Marine Biomes
Heterotrophs
Deep-sea Organisms
Climate and weather
40. Animals that consume primary consumers (carnivores)
Nitrified
Intertidal Zone
Secondary Consumers
Ecosystem
41. Evolved physical mechanisms that allow them to make Use of the heat produced as a consequence of respiratiion
Hemeothermic (Warm Blooded)
Aphotic Zone
Coimax Vegetatioin
Thundra Animals
42. Regiong beneatht he photic zone that receives no light
Aphotic Zone
Decomposer
Community
Aphotic Zone animals
43. Receive less than ten inches of rain each year; the rain is concentrated within a few heavy cloudbursts -ex: Sahara in Africa and Gobi in Asia
Pyramid of Numbers
Nitrogen
Desert Biome
Species
44. 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
Littoral Zone
Coimax Vegetatioin
Nitrogen Cycle 4
45. Vegetation has evolved adaptations for water conservation such as needle shaped leaves
Tundra Biome
Coimax Vegetatioin
Temperate Coniferous Plants
Environment
46. When a parasite benefits at the expense of the host
Grassland Animals
Cohesive Force
Temperate Deciduous Forest Biome
Parasitism
47. Animals that only eat other animals -possess pointed teeth and fang-like canine teeth for tearing flesh -have shorter digestive tracts because the easier digestibility of animal food
Intraspecific Interactions
Carnivores
Littoral Zone
Successive Communities
48. The metabolically produced CO2 is released to the air. The rest of the orgnaic carbon remains locked whthin an organism until its death (except for wastes given off) - at which time decay processes by bacteria return the CO2 to the air
Carbon Cycle 3
Commensalism
Biome
Grassland Biome
49. Crawling and sessile organsms
Herbivores
Benthos
Temperate Deciduous Forest Animals
Autotrophs
50. Determined by the same decisive factors-temperatures and rainfall
Secondary Consumers
Primary Consumers
Nature of Biomes
Carnivores