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Definition
Animal which only eats plants. |
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Definition
Animal which only eats meat. |
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Definition
Animal which eats both plants and meat. |
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Definition
Organism which makes its own food by photosynthesis using sunlight energy. |
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Term
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Definition
Organism which gets its energy from eating other organisms. |
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Term
Explain “abiotic factor” and give examples |
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Definition
A non-living component that affects an ecosystem, e.g. rainfall, air/water/soil temperature, water/soil pH, flow rate, wind speed, light intensity. |
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Term
Explain “biotic factor” and give examples |
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Definition
A living component that affects an ecosystem, e.g. disease, number of predators, competition. |
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Term
What does the arrow show in a food chain/web |
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Definition
The direction of the flow of energy. |
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Term
Where do plants get their energy from? |
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Definition
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Term
What is lost at each level of the food chain? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the relationship between the number of links in a food web and the stability of the ecosystem |
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Definition
The greater the number of links, the more stable the ecosystem. |
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Term
Name 4 techniques that can be used to sample the organisms in an area and say which organisms are sampled for each method. |
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Definition
Quadrat to sample plants. |
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Term
How do you use a quadrat? |
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Definition
Randomly select site, count the number of the selected species within the boundaries of the quadrat, repeat and calculate an average. Time this result by the number of quadrat fitting in the area. |
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Term
Precautions when using a quadrat. |
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Definition
Ensure the quadrat is thrown at random by closing eye and spinning before letting the quadrat go. Make-up a rule to account for plants only ½ way through the edge of the quadrat, e.g. only count these spanning the top and bottom sides. |
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Term
How do you make a pitfall trap and precautions? |
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Definition
Dig and place a cup levelled with the ground. Camouflage it to prevent birds from eating trapped animals, put salty water to prevent a trapped beetle/spider from eating all other animals. |
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Term
Materials, method and precautions needed for kick sampling. |
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Definition
A net, boots and a bucket. Place the net downstream of the stream flow, kick the river bed to dislodge and collect river organisms. |
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Term
Materials and method for tree-beating. |
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Definition
Tray, stick, potter. Place the tray under the branch, use the stick to dislodge organisms and the potter to catch them, especially those who can fly. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Similar organisms which could produce fertile offspring. |
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Term
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Definition
Organism's way of life, e.g. moulds (fungi) decompose things. |
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Term
Instrument to measure temperature and precautions |
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Definition
Thermometer, make sure to wait until the reading stops changing, make sure your hand does not warm it up. |
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Term
Instrument to measure light intensity and precautions |
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Definition
Light meter- Make sure you are not casting a shadow on the sensor and that the light meter is turned towards the sun. |
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Term
Instrument to measure moisture and precautions |
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Definition
Ecometer/environment meter/ moisture meter. Make sure you dry the probe between readings and that it is inserted deep enough so that the soil covers the sensor. |
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Term
Instrument to measure pH intensity and precautions |
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Definition
pH meter, make sure the soil is moist. If not, put a sample of soil in distilled water to measure its pH. Rinse/wipe the probe between readings. |
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Term
What are our five basic needs? |
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Definition
Air/oxygen, water, food, warmth and shelter. |
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