front 1 Which of the following causes Earth's seasons? | back 1 Earth's tilt on its axis |
front 2 Which of the following investigations is an example of the study of
an abiotic factor? | back 2 investigating how the amount of annual precipitation affects the distribution of a tree species |
front 3 Which of the following might be an investigation of microclimate? | back 3 how sunlight intensity affects plant community composition in the zone where a forest transitions into a meadow |
front 4 In creating global climate patterns, which of the following factors
is the primary cause of all of the other factors that are listed? | back 4 variation in the heating of Earth's surface |
front 5 For mountain ranges that are subjected to prevailing winds, why is
the climate drier on the leeward (downwind) side? | back 5 Pushed by the prevailing winds on the windward side, air is forced to rise, cool, condense, and drop its precipitation, leaving drier air to descend the leeward side. |
front 6 Subtropical plants are commonplace in Land's End, England, whose
latitude is the equivalent of Labrador in coastal Canada, where the
local flora is instead subarctic. Which statement best explains why
this apparent anomaly exists between North America and Europe? | back 6 Warm ocean currents interact with England, whereas cold ocean currents interact with Labrador. |
front 7 In mountainous areas of western North America, north-facing slopes
would be expected to _____. | back 7 -support biological communities similar to those found at higher elevations on similar south-facing slopes |
front 8 The main reason polar regions are cooler than the equator is that ________. | back 8 solar radiation strikes the poles at a lower angle and travels through more atmosphere |
front 9 Generally speaking, deserts are located in places where air masses
are usually ________. | back 9 descending |
front 10 If the direction of Earth's rotation reversed, the most predictable
effect would be ________. | back 10 winds blowing from west to east along the equator |
front 11 What are the two major factors determining the distribution of
terrestrial biomes? | back 11 temperature and rainfall |
front 12 Which of these is the largest terrestrial biome on Earth? | back 12 coniferous forest |
front 13 What is a biome? a major type of ecosystem | back 13 a major type of ecosystem |
front 14 Which of the biomes—tundra, coniferous forest, temperate broadleaf forest, temperate grassland, savanna, chaparral, desert, tropical rainforest—require periodic fires to maintain their existence? -savanna and chaparral | back 14 -savanna, chaparral, temperate grassland, and coniferous forest |
front 15 Which of the following biomes spans the largest annual mean
temperature range, but the narrowest mean precipitation range? | back 15 desert |
front 16 If global warming continues at its present rate, which biomes will
likely take the place of the coniferous forest (taiga)? | back 16 temperate broadleaf forest and grassland |
front 17 Which of the following statements best describes the interaction
between fire and ecosystems? | back 17 Many kinds of plants and plant communities have adapted to frequent fires. |
front 18 Which of the following is an important feature of most terrestrial biomes? | back 18 vegetation demonstrating vertical layering |
front 19 Why are experiments that involve transplanting species seldom conducted today? There are no criteria to determine if they are
successful. | back 19 The transplanted species are often disruptive to their new communities. |
front 20 Which would be a consequence of the removal of predators from a
population such as the Trinidadian guppy population? | back 20 Guppy color patterns would change; guppies would produce fewer but larger offspring; the nitrogen excretion rate would increase and the rate of growth of primary producers such as algae would increase. |
front 21 Which of the following examples demonstrate an ecological effect
leading to an evolutionary effect? | back 21 A few individuals with denser fur survive the coldest years of an ice age, and the offspring of the reproducing survivors of the ice age will likely have more dense fur. |
front 22 Which of the following areas of study focuses on the exchange of
energy, organisms, and materials between ecosystems? | back 22 landscape ecology |
front 23 Which of the following is an example of a population? | back 23 all of the redwood trees that live in a forest |
front 24 In wild populations, individuals most often show a _____ pattern of dispersion. uniform | back 24 clumped |
front 25 Suppose researchers marked 800 turtles and later were able to trap a
total of 300 individuals in that population, of which 150 were marked.
What is the estimate for total population size? | back 25 1,600 |
front 26 Which of the following assumptions must be made regarding the mark-recapture estimate of population size? I) Marked and unmarked individuals have the same probability of
being trapped. | back 26 I, II, and III |
front 27 Uniform spacing patterns in plants such as the creosote bush are most
often associated with _____. | back 27 competitive interaction between individuals of the same population |
front 28 Which of the following is the best natural example of a uniform
pattern of dispersion? | back 28 mushrooms growing on the floor of an old growth forest |
front 29 Starting from a single individual, what is the size of a population
of bacteria at the end of a 2-hour time period if they reproduce by
binary fission every 20 minutes? | back 29 64 |
front 30 During exponential growth, a population always ________. | back 30 grows at its maximum per capita rate |
front 31 Which of the following is regarded as a density-independent factor in
the growth of natural populations?
| back 31 flooding |
front 32 A broad-based pyramid-shaped age structure is characteristic of a
population that is _____. | back 32 growing rapidly |
front 33 Which of the following statements regarding the future of populations in developing, less industrialized countries are correct? I) The reproductive rates are predicted to remain below replacement
level. | back 33 only II, III, and IV |
front 34 Humans who have pets tend to be healthier than humans who do not have
pets. Which of these terms applies to the relationship between a human
and a pet? | back 34 mutualism |
front 35 According to the principle of competitive exclusion, two species
cannot continue to occupy the same _____.
| back 35 ecological niche |
front 36 The term used to describe a harmless organism resembling a harmful
one is _____. | back 36 Batesian mimicry |
front 37 What interactions exist between a lion pride and African wild dogs,
if the dogs are found to typically avoid areas with lions? | back 37 +/- |
front 38 Which fact is correct when describing species interactions? | back 38 A +/- interaction could shift to +/0 or +/+ over time, depending on other factors such as competition, population density, or environmental changes. |
front 39 An organism's "trophic level" refers to _____. | back 39 its food source |
front 40 Keystone species are those species _____. | back 40 whose absence would cause major disruption in a community |
front 41 Elephants are not the most abundant species in African grasslands, yet they influence community structure. The grasslands contain scattered woody plants, but they are kept in check by the uprooting activities of the elephants. Take away the elephants, and the grasslands are converted to forests or to shrublands. The newly growing forests support fewer species than the previous grasslands. Which of the following statements describes why elephants are the keystone species in this scenario? Elephants are the biggest herbivore in this
community. | back 41 Elephants exhibit a disproportionate influence on the structure of the community relative to their abundance. |
front 42 Which of the following best illustrates ecological succession? Grass grows on a sand dune, is replaced by shrubs, and then by
trees. | back 42 Grass grows on a sand dune, is replaced by shrubs, and then by trees. |
front 43 Why is a pathogen generally more virulent in a new habitat? | back 43 Hosts in new environments have not had a chance to become resistant to the pathogen through natural selection. |
front 44 Caribbean coral reef communities have been strongly influenced by an
unknown pathogen that causes white-band disease. How can the effect of
white-band disease best be described? | back 44 a cascade event that shifts the entire makeup of the community |
front 45 On a global scale, energy _____ ecosystems whereas chemical elements
_____ ecosystems. | back 45 flows through ... are recycled in |
front 46 Consider this segment of a food web: Snails and grasshoppers eat
pepper plants; spiders eat grasshoppers; shrews eat snails and
spiders; owls eat shrews. The shrew occupies the trophic level(s) of
_____. | back 46 secondary and tertiary consumers |
front 47 Which of the following terms encompasses all of the others? | back 47 heterotrophs |
front 48 In the ecosystem figure, which unit of the food web has the potential
to lose the most energy as heat? | back 48 primary producers |
front 49 Examine this food web for a particular terrestrial ecosystem. Species
C is toxic to predators. Which species is most likely to benefit from
being a mimic of C? | back 49 B |
front 50 Examine this food web for a particular terrestrial ecosystem. Which
pair of species could be omnivores? | back 50 C and E |
front 51 Which of the following organisms is correctly paired with its trophic level? | back 51 phytoplankton: primary producer |
front 52 The relationship between biomass and primary productivity is that _____. biomass is the rate of primary productivity | back 52 primary productivity is the rate at which biomass is produced |
front 53 _____ are secondary consumers. | back 53 Carnivores |
front 54 Which one of the following correctly ranks these organisms in order
from lowest to highest percent in production efficiency? | back 54 mammals, fish, insects |
front 55 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
2,500 J for cellular respiration. What is the production efficiency of
this owl? | back 55 7.4% |
front 56 Why does a vegetarian leave a smaller ecological footprint than an omnivore? | back 56 Eating meat is an inefficient way of acquiring photosynthetic productivity. |
front 57 Which statement best describes what ultimately happens to the
chemical energy that is consumed but not used to produce new biomass
in the process of energy transfer between trophic levels in an ecosystem? | back 57 It is eliminated as feces or is dissipated into space as heat as a result of cellular respiration consistent with the second law of thermodynamics. |
front 58 Detritus is composed of _____. | back 58 dead organic matter and excreted wastes |
front 59 Matter may be gained by, or lost from, ecosystems. How does this occur? | back 59 Matter can move from one ecosystem to another. |
front 60 In contrast to bioremediation, which is a strategy for _____, biological augmentation _____ a degraded ecosystem. -using organisms to add essential materials ... removes harmful
substances from | back 60 -removing harmful substances...uses organisms to add essential materials to |
front 61 The first step in ecosystem restoration is to _____. | back 61 restore the physical structure |
front 62 Which of the following would be considered an example of bioremediation? | back 62 adding nitrogen-fixing microorganisms to a degraded ecosystem to increase nitrogen availability |
front 63 Suppose that 60% of Earth’s species became extinct during a mass
extinction. If you could survey Earth’s biological communities 10,000
years after the end of this mass extinction, which of the following
would you most expect to find? | back 63 Food webs would show fewer connections and fewer trophic levels than before the extinction. |
front 64 Ecosystem services include processes that increase the quality of the
abiotic environment. Which of the following processes would fall under
this category? | back 64 Green plants and phytoplankton produce the oxygen we breathe. |
front 65 Loss of biodiversity matters not only with regard to mammals or other
vertebrates, but also microbes. Why are microbes worthy of discovery
and protection from extinction? | back 65 Microbes may produce unique proteins useful in genetic research |
front 66 Overharvesting encourages extinction and is most likely to affect ________. | back 66 large animals with low intrinsic reproductive rates |
front 67 Burning fossil fuels releases oxides of sulfur and nitrogen. These
air pollutants can be responsible for ________. | back 67 the death of fish in lakes |
front 68 Which of the following criteria have to be met for a species to
qualify as invasive? | back 68 introduced to a new area, spreads rapidly, and displaces native species |
front 69 Which of the following statements best describes why ecologists are currently concerned with global warming and the thawing of permafrost in many areas of the tundra biome? Migratory species of birds will likely be less successful finding
food in thawed tundra, and their abundance will drop
dramatically. | back 69 The bacterial decomposition of thawed organic materials over the widespread areas of the tundra will produce large quantities of CO2, which will add to greenhouse gases and exacerbate global warming. |
front 70 The effort to develop, manage, and conserve Earth's resources to meet
the needs of people today without limiting the ability of future
generations to meet their needs is called _____. | back 70 sustainable development |