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Ms. Smedley & Mr. Bartolone’s

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Presentation on theme: "Ms. Smedley & Mr. Bartolone’s"— Presentation transcript:

1 Ms. Smedley & Mr. Bartolone’s
Population Ecology Jeopardy

2 Symbiotic Relationships Succession Limiting Factors Growth Curves ????? $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $500 $500 $500 $500 $500

3 What are the 3 types of Symbiotic Relationships?
1-100

4 Click Anywhere to Continue
Commensalism Mutualism Parasitism Click Anywhere to Continue

5 What is Mutualism? Give an example… 1-200

6 Click Anywhere to Continue
A relationship between two species where both benefit Ex: bird & cow Click Anywhere to Continue

7 What is a symbiotic relationship?
1-300

8 Click Anywhere to Continue
A relationship between two organisms Click Anywhere to Continue

9 What is Parasitism? Give an example… 1-400

10 Click Anywhere to Continue
A relationship between two organisms, where one benefits and one is harmed. Ex: a tick and you Click Anywhere to Continue

11 What is Commensalism? Give an example… 1-500

12 Click Anywhere to Continue
A relationship where one organisms benefits and the other is neither harmed nor benefits. Ex: A bug hitching a ride on you Click Anywhere to Continue

13 What is Succession? 2-100

14 Click Anywhere to Continue
A change in an ecosystem over time Click Anywhere to Continue

15 What is Primary Succession?
2-200

16 Click Anywhere to Continue
An ecosystem beginning (pioneer species) where there previously was no life Click Anywhere to Continue

17 What is secondary succession?
2-300

18 Click Anywhere to Continue
An ecosystem starting where there was once life before. Click Anywhere to Continue

19 Why does Primary Succession take longer than Secondary Succession?
2-400

20 Click Anywhere to Continue
Because there is no soil available Click Anywhere to Continue

21 What is the difference between a Pioneer Species and a Climax Community?
2-500

22 Click Anywhere to Continue
Pioneer Species – first species in an ecosystem Climax Community – the highest point in succession Click Anywhere to Continue

23 What are Limiting Factors?
3-100

24 Click Anywhere to Continue
Biotic or Abiotic factors that restricts the existence of an organism. Click Anywhere to Continue

25 Biotic Factors in the environment that have an increasing effect as population size increases are called… 3-200

26 Click Anywhere to Continue
Density-Dependent Factors Click Anywhere to Continue

27 What are Density-Independent factors?
3-300

28 Click Anywhere to Continue
Abiotic factors in the environment that affect populations regardless of their density Click Anywhere to Continue

29 What factors affect density?
3-400

30 Click Anywhere to Continue
Immigration Emigration Birth Death Click Anywhere to Continue

31 What is the formula for density?
3-500

32 Click Anywhere to Continue
Dp = N / S Click Anywhere to Continue

33 What is a Boom and Bust curve?
4-100

34 Click Anywhere to Continue
A rapid increase, then rapid decrease Click Anywhere to Continue

35 What does a J-curve show?
4-200

36 Click Anywhere to Continue
An exponential growth in a population Click Anywhere to Continue

37 What is a Carrying Capacity?
How do we show it? 4-300

38 Click Anywhere to Continue
The maximum amount of organisms that an environment can hold. It is shown as an S-curve. Click Anywhere to Continue

39 What type of curve does our world currently have?
4-400

40 Click Anywhere to Continue
J-curve Click Anywhere to Continue

41 What are the x & y axis for a growth curve graph?
4-500

42 Click Anywhere to Continue
Number of Species & Time Click Anywhere to Continue

43 What is Immigration? 5-100

44 Click Anywhere to Continue
Movement of individuals into a populations Click Anywhere to Continue

45 What are the 3 key features of a Population?
5-200

46 Click Anywhere to Continue
Size Density Dispersion Click Anywhere to Continue

47 Disease, starvation, competition, and parasites are examples of…
5-300

48 Click Anywhere to Continue
Density-Dependent Factors Click Anywhere to Continue

49 What is the Rate of Natural Increase?
5-400

50 Click Anywhere to Continue
Birth Rate – Death Rate Click Anywhere to Continue

51 What is Dispersion? 5-500

52 Click Anywhere to Continue
How the population is spread out (clumped, even/uniform, or random) Click Anywhere to Continue


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