A) coyote B) skunk C) zebra D) cat
A) herbivore B) carnivore C) insectivore D) omnivore
A) soil B) sun C) consumer D) produce
A) A consumer only eats plants B) A consumer makes its own food C) A plant makes its own food D) A producer only eats meat
A) break down waste B) tear up foods C) eat plants D) eat meat
A) all food chains start with consumers B) the arrow shows the movement of energy C) the arrow shows which animals are herbivores D) the arrow show which animal eat meat
A) animals that break down waste B) animals that eat too much C) shows what plants eat in an ecosystem D) overlapping food chains
A) fish B) snail C) strawberries D) cats
A) sun B) water C) soil D) animals
A) adaptation B) producer C) sun D) consumer
A) The snake would eat grass B) The animals would be thirsty C) The animals would starve and likely all die D) The mouse would eat the snake
A) corn-->mouse-->snake B) corn<--mouse<--snake C) snake-->mouse-->corn D) mouse-->grass-->snake
A) fungus B) bread C) grass D) snake
A) both meat and plants B) mold C) meat D) plants
A) corn-->mouse-->cat B) grass-->turkey-->person C) mouse -->cat-->coyote D) lettuce-->turtle-->dog
A) scavenger B) trees C) omnivore D) predator
A) detrivore B) icky organism C) herbivore D) producer
A) parasitism B) predator-prey relationship C) friendship D) symbiosis
A) 1st trophic level B) tertiary trophic level C) 3rd trophic level D) 2nd trophic level
A) heterotroph B) waterotroph C) chemotroph D) omnivore
A) available energy mass B) biomass C) 10% rule D) energy pyramid
A) food chain B) 10% rule C) energy pyramid D) biomass pyramid
A) amount of energy that transfers from one trophic level to the next B) amount of waste produced by decomposers and detrivores C) number of producers available for herbivores to eat D) way two food chains are inter-connected
A) detrivore B) autotroph C) heterotroph D) herbivore
A) heterotroph B) producer C) chemotroph D) autotroph |