Are you ready for the science test?

A vibrant and engaging illustration depicting various ecosystems, including forests, oceans, and deserts, with plants and animals in their natural habitats.

Test Your Ecology Knowledge!

Are you ready to dive into the fascinating world of ecology? This quiz will challenge your understanding of ecosystems, symbiosis, energy sources, and much more!

  • 22 exciting multiple-choice questions
  • Learn about relationships between living organisms and their environments
  • Perfect for students, teachers, and nature enthusiasts
22 Questions6 MinutesCreated by ExploringNature47
What is ecology?
The study of living things and their environment
How abiotic and biotic factors live together
How different environments and the Earth were created
The study of adapting animals
What are the three types of symbiosis and what do they mean?
Mutalism- neither species benefit, commensalism-both species are benefitted, parasitism- symbiosis between bugs and insects
Mutalism- both species benefit, commensaliam- one species is harmed and the other benefitted, biome- both species are harmed
Mutalism- one species is benefitted and the other is neither harmed nor benefitted, commensalism-both species benefit, parasitism- one species is benefitted and one harmed
Mutalism-both species benefit, commensalism-one species is benefitted and the other is neither harmed nor benefitted, parasitism- one species is benefited and one harmed
What do producers do?
Produce young
Produce energy by photosynthesis
Produce fungi
Produce deadly gases
What is an example of a consumer?
Tyrannasaurus Rex
Eucalyptus tree
Venus Flytrap
Mushrooms
What do decomposers do?
Feed off dead or injured animals
Spread the seeds of a plant, hepling it reproduce
Break down dead or decayed material into soil
Make abiotic factors become biotic
What is an introduced species (an intruder) ?
A non-native species that has been introduced to an environment
A harmful biotic factor to local habitats and species
Unwanted pests
Name the method of controlling pests that uses natural predators
Parasitism
Biological control
Introduced species
Disease injection
What is epicormic growth?
The growth of a baby in the womb
The growth of a baby in an egg
The growth of new shoots in a tree after a fire
The growth of an introduced species
What is NOT an example of a non-renewable energy source?
Coal
Oil
Uranium
Geothermal energy
What is an environment?
The lodging of a biotic factor
The surrounding including abiotic and biotic factors
A habitat
The study of rocks
What is the BIOSPHERE?
All living things
Rock and soil
Water
Air
What is a biome?
A single cellular bacteria
An environmentally-friendly home (bio-home)
A type of environment
A cell found in consumers
What are scavengers?
Animals who eat dead or injured animals
Animals who eat only meat
Birds who brush away leaves to find worms
Things that break down dead or decaying factors
What is a physiological adaption?
The thickness of fur
A quicker digestive system
Where is migrates to in winter
How sharp its claws are
What is a structural adaptation?
The physical appearance of a living thing
How a biotic factor interacts with its environment
How the insides of an animal or plant adapts
How greenhouses are built
What are fossil fuels made of?
Distilled water and mud
Recyclable objects used by humans
The remains of dead plants and animals
Things found in the hydrosphere
Why is the greenhouse effect good?
It helps plants grow
It helps humans stay warm
It makes the Earth liveable
Because greenhouses look good
What does the ozone layer protect us from?
From aliens
From dehydrating
From U.V rays
From flesh-eating bacteria
What is soil degradation?
The bad quality of soil, after being influenced by humans
What worms and other soil creatures feed off
How produce is taken out of soil
A complicated bore water filtration system, helping plants get water through soil
What is the difference between habitats, communities and ecosystems.
Habitats apply to living things, communities apply to humans and ecosystems apply to plants
Habitats apply to one specific species, communities apply to biotic factors and ecosystems apply to both biotic and abiotic factors
Habitats apply to only one specific species, communities apply to both biotic and abiotic factors and ecosystems apply to only biotic factors
They are all the same
What was Fukushima?
A tsunami in Japan in 2011
An earthquake in Nepal in 2016
A volcanic eruption in Italy in 1864
A disease in the middle east in 1455
Why was Fukushima so destructive?
Because it was so early in the morning
Because it happened in Japan
Because it hit a nuclear power station
Because there were cars on the road
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