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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. Region on the continental shelf that contains ocean area with depths up to 600 feet and extends several hundred miles from the shores
Saprophytes
Environment
Littoral Zone
Substratum-Minerals
2. The chief disruptive force
Successive Communities
Hydrosphere
Competition
Nitrogen Cycle 5
3. Links between oceans and land
Environment
Competition
Photic Zone
Marshes
4. The oceans
Species
Herbivores
Aphotic Zone
Hydrosphere
5. Two fates await the ammonia (NH3). some are nitrified or dentrified
Benthos
Nitrogen Cycle 5
Desert Biome
Tertiary Consumers
6. Composed of populations that are able to exist under the new conditions
Successive Communities
Nitrified
Pioneer Organism
Pyramid of Numbers
7. One species may be competitively superior to the other and drive the second to extinction
Climate and weather
Competition Same Niche
Symbionts
Biome
8. Active swimmers such as fish - sharks - or whales that feed on plankton and smaller fish
Pelagic Zone
Nekton
Competition Same Niche
Scavengers
9. Monkeys - lizards - snakes - and birds - floor is inhabited by saprophytes
Tropical Rain Forest Animals
Communities
Carnivores
Temperate Deciduous Forest Animals
10. Have adaptations enabling them to survive in very cod water - with high pressures - and in complete darkness
Second Law of Thermodynamics
Temperate Deciduous Forest Plants
Deep-sea Organisms
Littoral Zone Populations
11. The study of interactions between organisms and their environment
Heterotrophs
Pioneer Organism
Ecology
Nitrogen
12. 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
Tropical Rain Forest Plants
Pyramid of Energy
Competition Same Niche 2
Nitrogen Cycle 2
13. The ultimate source of energy for all organisms
Biotic Environment
Physical Environment-Sunlight
Temperate Deciduous Forest Biome
Pyramid of Mass
14. Made into nitrites by chemosynthetic bacteria and then to usable nitrates by nitrifying bacteria
Aphotic Zone animals
Nitrified
Carbon Cycle 2
Nitrogen Cycle 4
15. When one organism is benefited by the association and the other is not affected
Lithosphere
Commensalism
Hemeothermic (Warm Blooded)
Food Chain
16. Free-living organisms that feed on other living organisms
Predators
Decomposer
Nitrogen Cycle 2
Rootlike holdfasts
17. Determined by the same decisive factors-temperatures and rainfall
Tertiary Consumers
Scavengers
Nature of Biomes
Omnivores
18. Community in an ecological succession is identified by a dominant species
Sere
Nekton
Food Web
Pioneer Organism
19. Animals that consume only plants or plant foods
Temperate Deciduous Forest Plants
Desert Biome
Other Cycles
Herbivores
20. Individuals belonging to the same species use the same resources and if a particular resource is limited - then these organisms must compete with one another
Marshes
Physical Environment-Sunlight
Intraspecific Interactions
Pelagic Zone
21. Because organisms at the upper levels of the food chain derive their food energy from organisms at lower levels - and because energy is lost from one level to the next - each level can support a successively smaller biomass
Pyramid of Mass
Predators
Omnivores
Autotrophs
22. Used to include only the population and not their physical environment
Biotic Community
Predator-Prey relationship
Freshwater Biomes
Nitrogen Cycle 5
23. Affect the type of vegetation that can be supported
Communities
Taiga Animals
Substratum-Minerals
Omnivores
24. Only animal life and other heterotrophic life exists
Omnivores
Aphotic Zone
Pelagic Zone
Taiga Biome
25. Includes climate - temperature - availability of light and water - and the local topology
Abiotic (Physical) Environment
Obligatory
Photic zone
Photic Zone
26. Frozen area with no vegetation and terrestrial animals -animals that do inhabit polar regions generally live near the polar oceans
Species
Climate and weather
Carbon Cycle 3
Polar Region
27. Group of organisms of the same species living together in a given location
Population
Communities
Desert animals
Pyramid of Numbers
28. Region typical of the open seas and can be divided into photic and aphotic zones
Scavengers
Heterotrophs
Photic Zone animals
Pelagic Zone
29. Nutrients - water - and sunlight limitations aid in maintaining populations at relatively constant levels
Niche
Temperate Coniferous Forest Biome
Environmental Factors
Predator-Prey relationship
30. Individual unit of an ecological system - but the organism itself is composed of smaller units -organs >tissues >cells >molecules >atoms > subatomic particles
Organism
Environmental Factors
Carnivores
Nitrogen
31. Deer - fox - woodchuck - and squirrel
Grassland Animals
Scavengers
Physical Environment-Sunlight
Temperate Deciduous Forest Animals
32. Forest floors contain moss and lichens
Sere
Taiga Plants
Cohesive Force
Secondary Consumers
33. Chief animal inhabitant is the moose; however - the black bear - wolf - and some birds
Taiga Animals
Carbon Cycle 3
Carbon Cycle 2
Environmental Factors
34. Jungles characterized by high temperatures and torrential rains -found in Central Africa - Central America - the Amazon basic - and Southeast Asia
Competition Same Niche 2
Conditions for stability in an Ecosystem
Tundra Biome
Tropical Rain Forest Biome
35. Plants growing on other plants - trees grow closely together; sunlight hardly reaches the forest floor
Epiphytes
Secondary Consumers
Material Cycles
Hypotonic
36. 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
Pioneer Organism
Biotic Community
Intertidal Zone
Hypotonic
37. Developed long legs and many are hoofed
Grassland Animals
Marine Biomes
Primary Consumers
Aquatic Biomes
38. Oceans connect to form one continuous body of water - which controls the earth's temperature by absorbing solar heat
Thundra Animals
Temperate Deciduous Forest Biome
Secondary Consumers
Marine Biomes
39. Evolved physical mechanisms that allow them to make Use of the heat produced as a consequence of respiratiion
Commensalism
Competition Same Niche 3
Hemeothermic (Warm Blooded)
Pelagic Zone
40. Polar bears - musk oxen - and arctic hens
Physical Environment-Sunlight
Climate and weather
Thundra Animals
Intertidal Zone
41. Freshwater Biomes vs. Saltwater 2: In rivers and streams - strong swift currents exist - and thus fish that have developed strong muscles and plants with _____________ have survived
Substratum-texture
Physical Environment- Water
Benthos
Rootlike holdfasts
42. Animals that consume primary consumers (carnivores)
Carbon Cycle 3
Secondary Consumers
Carbon Cycle 1
Tundra Biome
43. 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
Nitrogen Cycle 4
Marshes
Tropical Rain Forest Plants
Dentrified
44. Adaptations for maintaining their internal osmolarity and conserving water
Osmoregulation
Nitrogen Cycle 2
Pioneer Organism
Species
45. Ammonia (NH3) is broken down to release free nitrogen - which returns to the beginning of the denitrifying
Hypotonic
Predators
Dentrified
Carbon Cycle 2
46. Any group of similar organisms that are capable of reproducing
Tropical Rain Forest Biome
Species
Photic Zone animals
Hydrosphere
47. 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
Abiotic (Physical) Environment
Competition
Substratum-pH
48. One species may be competitively superior in some regions - and the other may be superior in other regions under different environmental conditions. this would result in the elimination of one species in some places and the other in other places
Carbon Cycle 3
Nekton
Osmoregulation
Competition Same Niche 2
49. When a parasite benefits at the expense of the host
Tundra Plants
Taiga Biome
Niche
Parasitism
50. Algae - sponges - clams - snails - sea urchins - starfish - and crabs
Substratum-Humus
Omnivores
Intertidal Zone Population
Food Web