How do the Taylor Glacier bacteria produce their energy?
A)
photosynthesis
B) heterotrophism
C)
chemoautotrophism
D) thermophobism
E) photoautotrophism
chemoautotrophism
In ecosystems, why is the term cycling used to describe material
transfer, whereas the term
flow is used for energy
exchange?
A) Materials are repeatedly used, but energy flows
through and out of ecosystems.
B) Both material and energy are
recycled and are then transferred to other ecosystems as in
a
flow.
C) Materials are cycled into ecosystems from other
ecosystems, but energy constantly flows
within the
ecosystem.
D) Both material and energy flow in a never-ending
stream within an ecosystem.
E) None of the choices is correct.
Materials are repeatedly used, but energy flows through and out of ecosystems.
Which statement most accurately describes how matter and energy are
used in ecosystems?
A) Matter flows through ecosystems; energy
cycles within ecosystems.
B) Energy flows through ecosystems;
matter cycles within and through ecosystems.
C) Energy can be
converted into matter; matter cannot be converted into energy.
D)
Matter can be converted into energy; energy cannot be converted into
matter.
E) Matter is used in ecosystems; energy is not.
Energy flows through ecosystems; matter cycles within and through ecosystems.
The law of conservation of matter states that matter cannot be
created, yet matter is sometimes
gained or lost to an ecosystem.
What is the reason for this seeming contradiction?
A)
Chemoautotrophic organisms can convert matter to energy.
B)
Ecosystems are open systems; therefore, matter can be moved in/out of
an ecosystem from/to
another ecosystem.
C) Photosynthetic
organisms convert sugars to more complex organic molecules.
D)
Detrivores convert matter to energy.
E) Heterotrophs convert heat
to energy.
Ecosystems are open systems; therefore, matter can be moved in/out of
an ecosystem from/to
another ecosystem.
Photosynthetic organisms are unique to most ecosystems because
they
A) synthesize organic compounds they obtain from decaying
heterotrophs.
B) synthesize inorganic compounds from organic
compounds.
C) use light energy to synthesize organic compounds
from inorganic compounds.
D) use chemical energy to synthesize
organic compounds.
E) convert light energy into matter.
use light energy to synthesize organic compounds from inorganic compounds.
A cow's herbivorous diet indicates that it is a(n)
A)
primary consumer.
B) secondary consumer.
C)
decomposer.
D) autotroph.
E) producer.
primary consumer.
To recycle nutrients, an ecosystem must have, at a minimum,
A)
producers.
B) producers and decomposers.
C) producers,
primary consumers, and decomposers.
D) producers, primary
consumers, secondary consumers, and decomposers.
E) producers,
primary consumers, secondary consumers, top carnivores, and decomposers.
producers and decomposers.
Which of the following terms encompasses all of the others?
A)
heterotrophs
B) herbivores
C) carnivores
D) primary
consumers
E) secondary consumers
heterotrophs
Which of the following is an example of an ecosystem?
A) all of
the brook trout in a 500-square-hectare river drainage system
B)
the plants, animals, and decomposers that inhabit an alpine
meadow
C) a pond and all of the plant and animal species that
live in it
D) the intricate interactions of the various plant and
animal species on a savanna during a
drought
E) all of the
organisms and their physical environment in a tropical rain forest
all of the organisms and their physical environment in a tropical rain forest
If the sun were to suddenly stop providing energy to Earth, most
ecosystems would vanish.
Which of the following ecosystems would
likely survive the longest after this
hypothetical
disaster?
A) tropical rain forest
B)
tundra
C) deep-sea vent community
D) grassland
E) desert
deep-sea vent community
Which of the following is true of detritivores?
A) They recycle
chemical elements directly back to primary consumers.
B) They
synthesize organic molecules that are used by primary
producers.
C) They convert organic materials from all trophic
levels to inorganic compounds usable by
primary
producers.
D) They secrete enzymes that convert the organic
molecules of detritus into CO2 and H2O.
E) Some species are
autotrophic, whereas others are heterotrophic.
They convert organic materials from all trophic levels to inorganic
compounds usable by
primary producers.
The major role of detritivores in ecosystems is to
A) provide a
nutritional resource for heterotrophs.
B) recycle chemical
nutrients to a form capable of being used by autotrophs.
C)
prevent the buildup of the organic remains of organisms, feces, and so
on.
D) return energy lost to the ecosystem by other organisms.
recycle chemical nutrients to a form capable of being used by autotrophs.
In a typical grassland community, which of the following is the
primary consumer?
A) hawk
B) snake
C) shrew
D)
grasshopper
E) grass
grasshopper
Which of the following statements is true?
A) An
ecosystem's trophic structure determines the rate at which
energy cycles within the
system.
B) At any point in time, it
is impossible for consumers to outnumber producers in an
ecosystem.
C) Chemoautotrophic prokaryotes near deep-sea vents
are primary producers.
D) There has been a well-documented
increase in atmospheric nitrogen over the past
several
decades.
E) The reservoir of ecosystem phosphorous
is the atmosphere.
Chemoautotrophic prokaryotes near deep-sea vents are primary producers.
Approximately 1% of the solar radiation that strikes a plant is
converted into the chemical
bond energy of sugars. Why is this
amount so low?
A) Approximately 99% of the solar radiation is
converted to heat energy.
B) Only 1% of the wavelengths of
visible light is absorbed by photosynthetic pigments.
C) Most
solar energy strikes water and land surfaces.
D) Approximately
99% of the solar radiation is reflected.
E) Only the green
wavelengths are absorbed by plants for photosynthesis.
Only 1% of the wavelengths of visible light is absorbed by photosynthetic pigments.
What percentage of solar radiation striking a plant is converted into
chemical energy?
A) 1%
B) 10%
C) 25%
D)
50%
E) 100%
1%
Subtraction of which of the following will convert gross primary
productivity into net
primary productivity?
A) the energy
contained in the standing crop
B) the energy used by heterotrophs
in respiration
C) the energy used by autotrophs in
respiration
D) the energy fixed by photosynthesis
E) all
solar energy
the energy used by autotrophs in respiration
Which of these ecosystems accounts for the largest amount of
Earth's net primary
productivity?
A) tundra
B)
savanna
C) salt marsh
D) open ocean
E) tropical rain forest
open ocean
Which of these ecosystems has the highest net primary productivity
per square meter
annually?
A) savanna
B) open
ocean
C) boreal forest
D) tropical rain forest
E)
temperate forest
tropical rain forest
Which of the following is a true statement regarding mineral
nutrients in soils and their
implication for primary
productivity?
A) Globally, phosphorous availability is most
limiting to primary productivity.
B) Adding a nonlimiting
nutrient will stimulate primary productivity.
C) Adding more of a
limiting nutrient will increase primary productivity,
indefinitely.
D) Phosphorous is sometimes unavailable to
producers due to leaching.
E) Alkaline soils are more productive
than acidic soils.
Phosphorous is sometimes unavailable to producers due to leaching.
The total biomass of photosynthetic autotrophs present in an
ecosystem is known as
A) gross primary productivity.
B)
standing crop.
C) net primary productivity.
D) secondary
productivity.
E) trophic efficiency.
standing crop.
How is it that the open ocean produces the highest net primary
productivity of Earth's
ecosystems, yet net primary
productivity per square meter is relatively low?
A) Oceans
contain greater concentrations of nutrients compared to other
ecosystems.
B) Oceans receive a lesser amount of solar energy per
unit area.
C) Oceans have the largest area of all the ecosystems
on Earth.
D) Ocean ecosystems have less species
diversity.
E) Oceanic producers are generally much smaller than
oceanic consumers.
Oceans have the largest area of all the ecosystems on Earth.
Why is net primary production (NPP) a more useful measurement to an
ecosystem ecologist
than gross primary production (GPP)?
A)
NPP can be expressed in energy/unit of area/unit of time.
B) NPP
can be expressed in terms of carbon fixed by photosynthesis for an
entire ecosystem.
C) NPP represents the stored chemical energy
that will be available to consumers in the
ecosystem.
D) NPP
is the same as the standing crop.
E) NPP shows the rate at which
the standing crop is utilized by consumers.
NPP represents the stored chemical energy that will be available to
consumers in the
ecosystem.
How is net ecosystem production (NEP) typically estimated in
ecosystems?
A) the ratio of producers to consumers
B) the
amount of heat energy released by the ecosystem
C) the net flux
of CO2 or O2 in or out of an ecosystem
D) the rate of
decomposition by detritivores
E) the annual total of incoming
solar radiation per unit of area
the net flux of CO2 or O2 in or out of an ecosystem
Aquatic primary productivity is most limited by which of the
following?
A) light and nutrient availability
B) predation
by primary consumers
C) increased pressure with depth
D)
pollution
E) temperature
light and nutrient availability
Aquatic ecosystems are most likely to be limited by which of the
following nutrients?
A) nitrogen
B) carbon
C)
potassium
D) iron
E) zinc
nitrogen
What is the primary limiting factor for aquatic productivity?
A)
pressure
B) lack of nutrients
C) light availability
D)
herbivores
E) competition
lack of nutrients
Which of the following ecosystems would likely have a larger net
primary
productivity/hectare, and why?
A) open ocean because
of the total biomass of photosynthetic autotrophs
B) a temperate
grassland because of the small standing crop biomass that results
from
consumption by herbivores and rapid decomposition
C)
tropical rain forest because of the high species diversity
D)
cave due to the lack of photosynthetic autotrophs
E) tundra
because of the incredibly rapid period of growth during the summer season
tropical rain forest because of the high species diversity
How is it that satellites can detect differences in primary
productivity on Earth?
A) Photosynthetic organisms absorb more
visible light in the 350-750 wavelengths.
B) Satellite
instruments can detect reflectance patterns of the photosynthetic
organisms of
different ecosystems.
C) Sensitive satellite
instruments can measure the amount of NADPH produced in
the
summative light reactions of different ecosystems.
D)
Satellites detect differences by comparing the wavelengths of light
captured and reflected by
photoautotrophs to the amount of light
reaching different ecosystems.
E) Satellites detect differences
by measuring the amount of water vapor emitted by transpiring
producers.
Satellites detect differences by comparing the wavelengths of light
captured and reflected by
photoautotrophs to the amount of light
reaching different ecosystems.
Which of the following lists of organisms is ranked in correct order
from lowest to highest
percent in production efficiency?
A)
mammals, fish, insects
B) insects, fish, mammals
C) fish,
insects, mammals
D) insects, mammals, fish
E) mammals,
insects, fish
mammals, fish, insects