front 1 1) How do the Taylor Glacier bacteria produce their energy? | back 1 Answer: C |
front 2 2) In ecosystems, why is the term cycling used to describe material
transfer, whereas the term flow is used for energy exchange? | back 2 Answer: A |
front 3 3) Which statement most accurately describes how matter and energy
are used in ecosystems? | back 3 Answer: B |
front 4 4) 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? | back 4 Answer: B |
front 5 5) Photosynthetic organisms are unique to most ecosystems because
they | back 5 Answer: C |
front 6 6) A cow's herbivorous diet indicates that it is a(n) | back 6 Answer: A |
front 7 7) To recycle nutrients, an ecosystem must have, at a
minimum, | back 7 Answer: B |
front 8 8) Which of the following terms encompasses all of the
others? | back 8 Answer: A |
front 9 9) Which of the following is an example of an ecosystem? | back 9 Answer: E |
front 10 10) 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? | back 10 Answer: C |
front 11 11) Which of the following is true of detritivores? | back 11 Answer: C |
front 12 12) The major role of detritivores in ecosystems is to | back 12 Answer: B |
front 13 13) The major role of detrivores in ecosystems is to | back 13 Answer: B |
front 14 14) In a typical grassland community, which of the following is the
primary consumer? | back 14 Answer: D |
front 15 15) Which of the following statements is true? | back 15 Answer: C |
front 16 16) 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? | back 16 Answer: B |
front 17 17) What percentage of solar radiation striking a plant is converted
into chemical energy? | back 17 Answer: A |
front 18 18) Subtraction of which of the following will convert gross primary
productivity into net primary productivity? | back 18 Answer: C |
front 19 19) Which of these ecosystems accounts for the largest amount of
Earth's net primary productivity? | back 19 Answer: D |
front 20 20) Which of these ecosystems has the highest net primary
productivity per square meter annually? | back 20 Answer: D |
front 21 21) Which of the following is a true statement regarding mineral
nutrients in soils and their implication for primary
productivity? | back 21 Answer: D |
front 22 22) The total biomass of photosynthetic autotrophs present in an
ecosystem is known as | back 22 Answer: B |
front 23 23) 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? | back 23 Answer: C |
front 24 24) Why is net primary production (NPP) a more useful measurement to
an ecosystem ecologist than gross primary production (GPP)? | back 24 Answer: C |
front 25 25) How is net ecosystem production (NEP) typically estimated in
ecosystems? | back 25 Answer: C |
front 26 26) Aquatic primary productivity is most limited by which of the
following? | back 26 Answer: A |
front 27 27) Aquatic ecosystems are most likely to be limited by which of the
following nutrients? | back 27 Answer: A |
front 28 28) What is the primary limiting factor for aquatic
productivity? | back 28 Answer: B |
front 29 29) Which of the following ecosystems would likely have a larger net
primary productivity/hectare, and why? | back 29 Answer: C |
front 30 30) How is it that satellites can detect differences in primary
productivity on Earth? | back 30 Answer: D |
front 31 31) Which of the following lists of organisms is ranked in correct
order from lowest to highest percent in production efficiency? | back 31 Answer: A |
front 32 32) A 3-hectare lake in the American Midwest suddenly has succumbed
to an algal bloom. What is the likely cause of eutrophication in
freshwater ecosystems, such as this one? | back 32 Answer: C |
front 33 33) Approximately how many kg of carnivore biomass can be supported
by a field plot containing 1,000 kg of plant material? | back 33 Answer: D |
front 34 34) The amount of chemical energy in a consumer's food that is
converted to its own new biomass during a given time period is known
as which of the following? | back 34 Answer: E |
front 35 35) What is secondary production? | back 35 Answer: C |
front 36 36) How does inefficient transfer of energy among trophic levels
result in the typically high endangerment status of many top-level
predators? | back 36 Answer: A |
front 37 37) Trophic efficiency is | back 37 Answer: B |
front 38 38) Owls eat rats, mice, shrews, and small birds. Assume that, over a
period of time, an owl consumes 5,000 J of animal material. The owl
loses 2,300 J in feces and owl pellets and uses 2,600 J for cellular
respiration. What is the production efficiency of this owl? | back 38 Answer: C |
front 39 39) Why does a vegetarian leave a smaller ecological footprint than
an omnivore? | back 39 Answer: E |
front 40 40) For most terrestrial ecosystems, pyramids composed of species
abundances, biomass, and energy are similar in that they have a broad
base and a narrow top. The primary reason for this pattern is
that | back 40 Answer: B |
front 41 41) Which of the following is primarily responsible for limiting the
number of trophic levels in most ecosystems? | back 41 Answer: E |
front 42 42) Which trophic level is most vulnerable to extinction? | back 42 Answer: D |
front 43 43) Which statement best describes what ultimately happens to the
chemical energy that is not converted to new biomass in the process of
energy transfer between trophic levels in an ecosystem? | back 43 Answer: D |
front 44 44) Consider the food chain grass → grasshopper → mouse → snake →
hawk. How much of the chemical energy fixed by photosynthesis of the
grass (100%) is available to the hawk? | back 44 Answer: A |
front 45 45) If the flow of energy in an arctic ecosystem goes through a
simple food chain, perhaps involving humans, starting from
phytoplankton to zooplankton to fish to seals to polar bears, then
which of the following could be true? | back 45 Answer: E |
front 46 46) Nitrogen is available to plants mostly in the form of | back 46 Answer: E |
front 47 47) Which of the following locations is the main reservoir for
nitrogen in Earth’s nitrogen cycle? | back 47 Answer: A |
front 48 48) Which of the following locations is the reservoir for carbon in
the carbon cycle? | back 48 Answer: E |
front 49 49) In the nitrogen cycle, the bacteria that replenish the atmosphere
with N2 are | back 49 Answer: C |
front 50 50) How does phosphorus normally enter ecosystems? | back 50 Answer: C |
front 51 51) Which of the following statements is correct about biogeochemical
cycling? | back 51 Answer: B |
front 52 52) Why do logged tropical rain forest soils typically have
nutrient-poor soils? | back 52 Answer: C |
front 53 53) What is the first step in ecosystem restoration? | back 53 Answer: A |
front 54 54) What is the goal of restoration ecology? | back 54 Answer: B |
front 55 55) Which of the following relies upon existing biodiversity for the
decontamination of polluted ecosystems? | back 55 Answer: A |
front 56 56) Which of the following would be considered an example of
bioremediation? | back 56 Answer: D |
front 57 57) To selectively remove soil toxins from regions affected by
Hurricane Katrina, some residents have raised sunflowers and other
plants in their yards. Then, the mature plants are pulled up and
safely stored with other contaminated wastes. This is an example
of | back 57 Answer: D |
front 58 58) Corn production in many states of the Midwest is limited by
nitrogen levels in the soil. Some farmers reduce the need to apply
expensive anhydrous ammonia to their fields by rotating corn crops
with nitrogen-fixing soybean crops. Using soybeans to add nitrogen to
soils is an example of | back 58 Answer: A |
front 59 1) Examine the food web for a particular terrestrial ecosystem in
Figure 42.1. Which species is autotrophic? | back 59 Answer: A |
front 60 2) Examine the food web for a particular terrestrial ecosystem in
Figure 42.1. Which species is most likely a decomposer in this food
web? | back 60 Answer: E |
front 61 3) Examine the food web for a particular terrestrial ecosystem in
Figure 42.1. Species C is toxic to predators. Which species is most
likely to benefit from being a mimic of C? | back 61 Answer: B |
front 62 4) Examine the food web for a particular terrestrial ecosystem in
Figure 42.1. Which pair of species could be omnivores? | back 62 Answer: E |
front 63 5) If Figure 42.2 represents a terrestrial food web, the combined
biomass of C + D would probably be | back 63 Answer: D |
front 64 6) If Figure 42.2 represents a marine food web, the smallest organism
might be | back 64 Answer: A |
front 65 7) In the diagram of the nitrogen cycle in Figure 42.3, which number
represents nitrite (NO2)? | back 65 Answer: C |
front 66 8) In the diagram of the nitrogen cycle in Figure 42.3, which number
represents the ammonium ion (NH4+)? | back 66 Answer: D |
front 67 9) In the diagram of the nitrogen cycle in Figure 42.3, which number
represents nitrogen-fixing bacteria? | back 67 Answer: A |
front 68 10) In the diagram of the nitrogen cycle in Figure 42.3, which number
represents nitrifying bacteria? | back 68 Answer: B |
front 69 1) As big as it is, the ocean is nutrient-limited. If you wanted to
investigate this, one reasonable approach would be to | back 69 Answer: C |
front 70 2) A porcupine eats 3,000 J of plant material. Of this, 2,100 J is
indigestible and is eliminated as feces, 800 J are used in cellular
respiration, and 100 J are used for growth and reproduction. What is
the approximate production efficiency of this animal? | back 70 Answer: B |
front 71 3) Suppose you are studying the nitrogen cycling in a pond ecosystem
over the course of a month. While you are collecting data, a flock of
100 Canada geese lands and spends the night during a fall migration.
What could you do to eliminate error in your study as a result of this
event? | back 71 Answer: C |
front 72 1) Which of the following organisms is incorrectly paired with its
trophic level? | back 72 Answer: C |
front 73 2) Which of these ecosystems has the lowest net primary production
per square meter? | back 73 Answer: B |
front 74 3) The discipline that applies ecological principles to returning
degraded ecosystems to a more natural state is known as | back 74 Answer: D |
front 75 4) Nitrifying bacteria participate in the nitrogen cycle mainly
by | back 75 Answer: D |
front 76 5) Which of the following has the greatest effect on the rate of
chemical cycling in an ecosystem? | back 76 Answer: C |
front 77 6) The Hubbard Brook watershed deforestation experiment yielded all
of the following results except: | back 77 Answer: E |
front 78 7) Which of the following would be considered an example of
bioremediation? | back 78 Answer: E |
front 79 8) If you applied a fungicide to a cornfield, what would you expect
to happen to the rate of decomposition and net ecosystem production
(NEP)? | back 79 Answer: E |