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GCSE Combined Science

Ecology

148 questions12 subtopicsAQAEdexcelEduqasOCRWJEC
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What's covered

The Carbon Cycle16
Conservation14
Food Chains and Food Webs14
Biodiversity13
Biotic and Abiotic Factors13
Ecosystems12
Human Impacts on Ecosystems12
Sampling Ecosystems12
Nutrient Cycles11
Predator-Prey Relationships11
Biomass and Energy Transfer10
The Nitrogen Cycle10

Key facts

1

Biodiversity measures the variety of species in an ecosystem.

2

Biomass decreases at each higher trophic level because energy is lost as heat, movement, and undigested faeces.

3

Abiotic factors are non-living environmental factors: light intensity, temperature, water/ moisture, oxygen concentration, soil pH, and mineral content.

4

Captive breeding programmes breed endangered species in zoos or reserves to increase population numbers and reintroduce individuals to the wild.

5

Examples of abiotic factors include temperature and light intensity.

6

An arrow in a food chain represents the direction of energy and biomass transfer.

7

Acid rain lowers the pH of lakes and rivers, killing fish and aquatic invertebrates.

8

Combustion of fossil fuels adds carbon dioxide to the atmosphere.

9

The classic Arctic-Canada example of predator-prey cycling is lynx and (snowshoe) hare.

10

A belt transect investigates how organism distribution changes across an environmental gradient.

Sample questions

A taste of the 148 questions in this topic — answers marked. Sign up to practise the full set with spaced repetition.

1Biodiversity

What is biodiversity?

  • The geographic range of one species across many habitats.
  • The rate at which new species evolve in an area.
  • The total number of individuals in a single species.
  • The variety of species in an ecosystem, supporting stability.
2Biomass and Energy Transfer

Why is biomass less at each higher trophic level?

  • Energy is lost as heat, movement, and undigested faeces.
  • Energy is stored in soil between each trophic level.
  • Higher animals are bigger and need less food per kilogram.
  • Producers convert all sunlight into biomass at the base.
3Biotic and Abiotic Factors

Which is an abiotic factor?

  • Air temperature
  • Disease outbreak
  • Food competition
  • New predator
4Conservation

Which methods can humans use to protect endangered species?

  • Adding more predators and banning tourism in protected areas.
  • Captive breeding, seed banks, reserves, and reintroduction programmes.
  • Removing native species and using fertilisers to boost growth.
  • Restricting photosynthesis to reduce plant competition for animals.
5Ecosystems

What is the difference between a community and an ecosystem?

  • A community contains only animals; an ecosystem adds plants too.
  • A community is larger than an ecosystem in its scope.
  • An ecosystem has been studied; a community is unstudied.
  • Community is all living organisms; ecosystem adds the abiotic environment.
6Food Chains and Food Webs

What does an arrow in a food chain represent?

  • Direction of energy and biomass transfer
  • Direction of evolutionary change
  • Direction of predator movement
  • Direction of waste excretion

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