Community Interactions Review Quizizz PDF

Summary

This document is a quiz on community interactions, covering topics like predation, competition, mutualism, and commensalism in organisms.

Full Transcript

Worksheets Name Community Interactions Review Class Total questions: 22 Worksheet time: 28mins Date Instructor name:...

Worksheets Name Community Interactions Review Class Total questions: 22 Worksheet time: 28mins Date Instructor name: Mx Stewart Dods 1. A relationship between two species where one benefits while the other is harmed. a) Mutualism b) Commensalism c) Parasitism d) Naturalism 2. A frog eats a fly. The frog and fly are demonstrating ________. a) predator/prey b) competition c) parasitism d) mutualism 3. A relationship between two organisms in which one organism benefits and the other is unharmed a) Commensalism b) Parasitsm c) Competition d) Mutualism 4. The crocodile and bird have a _______________ relationship. The crocodile benefits by having its teeth cleaned. The bird benefits by gaining food and protection. Both animals benefit from this relationship. a) predator and prey b) commensalism c) mutualism d) parasitism 5. No two species can occupy the same niche a) Limiting Competitive Theory b) Competitive Exclusion Principle c) Limiting Exclusion Theory d) Competitive Limiting Principle 6. What type of species interaction is the following: two bears fighting over the same mate. a) parasitism b) mutualism c) competition d) predation 7. _______ is when 2 or more species live in close association. a) symbiosis b) predation c) food web d) competition 8. Name the species interaction: A decorator crab camouflages itself with sponges. Sponges are unaffected. a) commensalism b) predation c) mutualism d) competition 9. Evidence shows that some grasses benefit from being grazed. Which of the following terms would best describe this plant-herbivore interaction? a) Competition b) Mutualism c) Parasitism d) Commensalism 10. This outcome of competition often leads to the extinction of one of the competing species a) Competitive Exclusion b) Character Displacement c) Resource Partitioning d) Brood Parasitism 11. When two species divide a resource, based on differences in their behavior or morphology. a) competitive exclusion principle b) resource partitioning c) competition d) character displacement 12. hey can live in many different places, eat a variety of foods, and tolerate a wide range of environmental conditions. a) specialist species b) generalist species 13. They may be able to live in only one type of habitat, tolerate only a narrow range of climatic and other environmental conditions, or use only one type or a few types of food. a) generalist species b) specialist species 14. In which type of interaction does one animal eat another for energy and nutrients? a) Parasitism b) Competition c) Predation d) Mutualism 15. In Madagascar, several species of lemur eat bamboo, but each species specializes in one part of the bamboo—one species eats mature bamboo stalks, one species eats bamboo shoots, and one species eats leaves. This is an example of a) resource partitioning. b) niche partitioning. c) speciation. d) competition. 16. Two species of finch live in the same environment. Over time, one develops a larger beak to consume larger seeds, while the other develops a narrow beak to consume more delicate seeds. This is an example of a) character displacement. b) competitive exclusion. c) coevolution. d) resource partitioning. 17. In the western United States, at the southern edge of their range, moose are sometimes so severely infested with ticks that they die. The tick/moose relationship is best described as a) mutualistic. b) predatory. c) symbiotic. d) parasitic. 18. A beehive depends on pollen from flowers to survive. Flowers depend on bees to pollinate them. Humans tend bee hives, offering the bees a place to live in exchange for some of their honey. The relationship among these three sets of organisms is a) commensalist. b) mutualistic. c) symbiotic. d) parasitic. 19. Animals gathering around a water hole in a drought-prone area and establishing hierarchies of access to the water is an example of competition. a) false b) true 20. You have many species of bacteria living in your gut that help you with digestion. This relationship is best defined as commensalism. a) false b) true 21. A tapeworm lives inside of a host's body. This means that tapeworms are _______________. a) Flukes b) Endoparasites c) Free-living d) Ectoparasites 22. ___________ attach or burrow into the skin and include ticks, fleas, and lice. a) viruses b) helminth c) protozoa d) ectoparasites

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