principles of ecology final practice questions

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86 Terms

1
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the intermediate disturbance hypothesis suggests that:

a. maximum biodiversity occurs at high levels of disturbance

b. low levels of disturbance maximize biodiversity

c. moderate levels of disturbance support the highest biodiversity

d. ecosystems are stable regardless of the disturbance levels

c. moderate levels of disturbance support the highest biodiversity

2
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what type of species are typically the first to colonize a newly disturbed habitat?

a. k-selected species

b. climax species

c. pioneer species

d. intermediate species

c. pioneer species

3
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what does the miyawaki method aim to achieve in urban reforestation?

a. slow tree growth over centuries

b. replace native species with non-native ones

c. create dense microforests with rapid biodiversity growth

d. reduce tree cover in urban areas

c. create dense microforests with rapid biodiversity growth

4
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T/F: keystone species exert a disproportionately large effect on ecosystem structure and function

true

5
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T/F: biomagnification leads to a decrease in toxic substance concentration as it moves up the food chain

false, toxins accumulate in higher concentrations at hight trophic levels

6
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T/F: the inhibition model of succession suggests that earlier species prevent the establishment of later species until they die

true

7
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Link the decline of sea otters to the destruction of kelp forests

sea otters decline due to hunting orcas --> sea urchin pops increase (their prey) --> urchins overgraze kelp foerests --> los of kelp removes habitat for many marine species --> collapse of kelp forest ecosystems

8
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which of the following is an example of secondary succession?

a. the colonization of volcanic rock by lichens

b. the development of a forest after a wildfire

c. the formation of new coral reefs in deep ocean regions

d. the creation of sand dunes on a coastline

b. the development of a forest after wildfire

9
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what ecological process explains why coral reefs in Kaneohe Bay recovered after sewage was diverted offshore?

a. competitive exclusion

b. phase shfit

c. biomagnification

d. habitat fragmentation

b. phase shift

10
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compare and contrast autogenic and allogenic succession

both processes shape community structure but differ in how they do so. autogenic succession is driven by biotic factors within the community (ex: species interactions). in contrast, allogenic succession is influenced by external abiotic factors (ex: climate, disturbance, or nutrient shifts)

11
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T/F: in an energy pyramid, energy is evenly distributed across all trophic levels

false

12
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T/F: coral bleaching occurs when corals expel their zooxanthellae due to heat stress

true

13
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what is a key challenge that we discussed that is faced by urban reforestation efforts?

a. lack of community interest

b. competition for land and resources

c. excessive tree growth

d. complete elimination of pollution

b. competition for land and resources

14
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which of the following is NOT a characteristic of an r-selected species?

a. high reproductive rate

b. short lifespan

c. strong parental care

d. rapid population growth

c. strong parental care

15
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in trophic cascades, the removal of a top predator often leads to:

a. increased herbivore populations and decreased primary producers

b. decreased herbivore populations and increased primary producers

c. increased primary producer populations and increased herbivore populations

d. no significant changes in lower trophic levels

a. increased herbivore populations and decreased primary producers

16
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define population

17
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define system

18
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which has more dynamic seasonal light exposure: a tropical rainforest or a temperate deciduous forest?

19
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which habitat generally supports a more complex food chain: polar bay or tropical estuary>

20
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which habitat would a ruderal species most likely be found in: hot desert or disturbance-prone grassland?

21
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all else equal, which habitat would recover faster via succession: a tropical forest after a volcanic eruption or a sub-alpine forest after a large fire?

22
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link a deadly strain of canine parvovirus (causes dehydration and death in canines) introduced into the Isle Royale National park in Michigan by tourists' dogs to a 50% decline in songbird biodiversity in Isle Royale National Park

23
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what factors distinguish the realized vs fundamental range of a species?

behavioral, dispersal, resources, competitors, and abiotic factors

24
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what 3 things must all species do to continue existing?

survive, thrive, and reproduce

25
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how do plate tectonics influence biodiversity?

plate movement create geographic barriers, leading to species isolation, divergence, and speciation

26
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what is the difference between allopatric and sympatric speciation?

allopatric speciation occurs due to physical separation of populations, while sympatric speciation happens without a physical barrier, often through genetic changes or behavioral shifts

27
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explain the role of zooxanthellae in coral reefs

28
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explain the role of zooxanthellae in coral reefs

zooxanthellae are photosynthetic symbionts that provide corals with nutrients and energy, while corals offer them shelter and CO2 for photosynthesis

29
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what is the difference between a fundamental and realized niche?

a fundamental niche is the full range of conditions a species can occupy while the realized niche is where it actually exists de to competition and other factors

30
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difference between climate and weather

weather is short term condition of the atmosphere; weather is the average trend of the weather pattern over a long period of time

31
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what is the difference betwen migration and dispersal?

migration is the cyclical pattern/movement of species through their environment, such as eels or turtles moving between their breeding and feeding grounds. dispersal is a one-way trip or permanent movement of individuals form the adult habitat to the offspring habitat

32
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what are the four forces of evolution?

gene flow, natural selection, mutation, and genetic drift

33
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T/F: according to the coriolis effect, an object deflected from the northern hemisphere will move towards the left

false, objects deflected from the northern hemisphere will move to the right

34
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what are the seven levels of ecological organization?

organism --> population --> interaction --> community --> ecosystem --> landscape --> biosphere

35
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how do rats reshape coral reefs?

when rats are introduced to some islands they prey upon eggs and chicks of birds, decreasing the bird count and diversity. Now there are less birds foraging at sea so less nitrogen is deposited in the near-shore habitat (nitrogen deposits occur through bird feces). marine algae then have less nutrients to grow and the number of algae-eaitng fish (ex. damselfish) declines along with the coral health

36
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what are four things to consider when defining evolution and how would we then define evolution?:

we must consider genetic material, changes, population, and time. with all four, we define evolution as change ni gene frequencies within a species population over time

37
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what two words came together to make the term ecology. define those words and explain how they correlate to the definition of ecology

biology - the scientific study of living organisms

economics - the study of systems and interactions between systems

- they relate to the definition of ecology because ecology is defined as the study of the relationships/interactions among living organisms and their environment

38
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differentiate between acclimation and adaptation

acclimation: short-term physiological adjustments organisms make in response to environmental changes

adaptation: long-term evolutionary changes in physiology over generations

39
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differentiate between endotherms and ectotherms

ectotherms: organisms that depend on external heat sources for temperature regulations

endotherms: organisms that depend on external heat sources for temperature regulation

endotherms: organisms that generate internal heat through metabolic processes, regardless of external conditions

40
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What does He mean in the heat storage equation (HS = Hm ± Hcd ± Hcv ± Hr - He)?

a. heat of exhalation

b. heat of exchange

c. the heat of evapotranspiration

d. heat of evaporation

d. heat of evaporation

41
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what physiological features do organisms use for temperature regulation? (select all that apply)

a. bradycardia

b. countercurrent exchange

c. vasoconstriction

d. sweating

e. insulation

42
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how does bradycardia (slowing heart rate) help animals conserve heat?

a. it raises blood pressure, which allows for more blood flow and more heat

b. it keeps blood to the core which means less heat is lost to the environment

c. it means less blood to the outer parts of the body and causes shivering

d. it means more blood to the skin allowing for a higher body temperature

b. it keeps blood to the coure which means less heat is lost to the environment

43
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T/F: poikilotherms can only survive in narrow temperature ranges

False, that is stenotherms

44
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what kind of species interaction occurs when Dr. Willette's former bees collect pollen while pollinating flowers?

a. parasitism

b. mutualism

c. commensalism

d. competition

b. mutualism

45
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which of the following is NOT a characteristic of prokaryotic cells?

a. lack of a nucleus

b. presence of membrane-bound organelles

c. single circular chromosome

d. cell wall in most species

b. presence of membrane-bound organelles

46
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T/F: in terms of trade-offs in organism performance, fecundity refers to reproductive sucess?

True

47
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how do plants acclimate to seasonal temperature changes?

a. through short-term physiological adjustments

b. by undergoing genetic adaptation

c. by migrating to warmer areas

d. by increasing their water intake

a. through short-term physiological adjustments

48
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which of the following is NOT an example of homeostasis?

a. regulating blood sugar levels through insulin and glucagon

b. maintaining a stable body temperature in mammals

c. fish developing antifreeze proteins over generations to survive cold waters

d. the kidney balancing salt and water levels in the body

c. fish developing antifreeze proteins over generations to survive cold waters

49
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a barnacle attaching to a whale and gaining transportation without affecting the whale is an example of?

a. parasitism

b. compeition

c. commensalism

d. mutualism

c. commensalism

50
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match the terms with the correct def:

1. ecology

2. population

3. community

4. ecosystem

5. biosphere

6. Niché

7. natural selection

8. genetic drift

9. hardy-weinberg equilibrium

10. sympatric speciation

a) the study of interactions between organisms and their environment

b) a group of individuals of the same species living in the same area

c) all the organisms living in an area and interacting with each other

d) a biological community plus its physical environment

e) the global sum of all ecosystems on Earth

f) the role and position a species has in its environment

g) process by which individuals with advantageous traits survive and reproduce

h) random changes in allele frequencies in small populations due to chance

i) a popoulation remains genetically stable if no evolution occurs

j) new species arise without a physical barrier, often due to genetic divergence

1 - A

2 - B

3 - C

4 - D

5 - E

6 - F

7 - G

8 - H

9 - I

10 - J

51
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what type of species interaction occurs when two species compete for the same food resource?

a. mutualism

b. commensalism

c. competition

d. parasitism

c. competition

52
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keystone species play an important role in ecosystems because:

a. they are the most abundant species

b. they have a disproportionately large effect on their environment

c. they always act as predators

d. they do not interact with other species

b. they have a disproportionately large effect on their environment

53
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what is carrying capacity (K)?

a. the max number of individuals an environment can support

b. the total number of births per year in a population

c. the minimum population size needed for survival

d. the number of individuals that migrate each year

a. the max number of individuals an environment can support

54
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which type of survivorship curve is characterized by high juvenile mortality but increased survival for adults?

a. type I

b. type II

c. type III

d. logistic

c. type III

55
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a species that produces many offspring with little parental care typically exhibits what type of reproductive strategy?

a. k-selected

b. r-selected

c. logistic-selected

d. carrying capacity selected

b. r-selected

56
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what is the difference between intraspecific competition and interspecific competition?

intraspecific competition is competition for resources of the same species, and interspecific competition is between individuals of different species

57
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early in this course, we discussed three things all species require to continue existing as a species. which of the following is NOT one of those things?:

a. survive

b. thrive

c. arrive

d. reproduce

c. arrive

58
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________ _______ occurs due to the physical or geographic separation of population, while _____ ______ occurs without a physical or geographical separation of the population:

a. sympatric speciation; allopatric speciation

b. natural selection; vicariance

c. allopatric speciation; sympatric speciaiton

d. gene flow; vicariance

c. allopatric speciation; sympatric speciation

59
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______ is the long term patterns and trends of precipitation + temperature in an area, whereas ____ are the short-term (day-to-day) conditions in precipitation + temperature.

a. weather, ecosystem

b. weather, micro-climate

c. climate, weather

d. climate, micro-climate

c. climate, weather

60
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which of the following is not one of the seven levels of ecological organization, as presented in Principles of Ecology?

a. organ

b. organism

c. interaction

d. landscape

a. organ

61
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evolution is defined as the change in _____ within _____ over time.

a. weather patterns; two ecosystems

b. two populations; one ecosystem

c. allelic frequency; an ecosystem

d. allelic frequencies; a population

d. allelic frequencies; a population

62
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recall the "methods in field sampling" lab we had in week 1. what is the name of the tool we used to estimate percent cover of plants on the green roof?

a. quadrat

b. transect line

c. calipers

d. sand corer

a. quadrat

63
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which of the following is NOT an assumption of the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium model?

a. no gene flow

b. small population size

c. no migration

d. random mating

b. small population size

64
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Historically Florida panthers numbered in the thousands in the southeastern region of the United

States, but today there are reported to be less than 200 in the wild. The genetic diversity of the

remaining panthers is substantially lower than it was historically; a condition illustrated in high

frequency of Feline Immunodeficiency Virus and Puma Lentivirus resulting from inbreeding. Which

evolutionary process best explains the current genetic diversity of the Florida panther?

a. natural selection

b. allopatric speciation

c. genetic drift via founder's effect

d. genetic drift via bottleneck

d. genetic drift via bottleneck

65
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Considering Mendelian inheritance, say you cross a pair of pea plants with the genotypes YY and

yy. Y represents the dominant color trait yellow, y represents the recessive color trait green. What

percentage of the resulting offspring will be heterozygotes?

a. 0%

b. 25%

c. 50%

d. 100%

d. 100%

66
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T/F: vicariance is the precursor to allopatric speciation

true

67
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T/F: heritability decreases with environmental vicariance

true

68
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T/F: open populations are those without barriers to migration

false

69
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T/F: evolution acts at the scale of the individual, where was adaption acts at the scale of the poulation

false

70
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T/F: in experimental design, replicates are included to account for the inherent variability within the experiment, thus giving increased validity to the results.

true

71
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distinguish between a balancing (negative feedback) loop and reinforcing (positive feedback) loop

positive feedback enhances or amplifies a change that moves the system away from homeostasis/set point; negative feedback buffers changes that occur after a stimulus pushes a system away from homeostasis/set point, bringing it back to said set point

72
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distinguish between dynamic equilibrium and resiliency

dynamic equilibrium refers to a system where the system maintains a relatively stable balance through adjustment, whereas resilience describes the system's ability to recover from disruption (even a significant disturbance) back to a functional state

73
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distinguish between migration and dispersal

migration is the cyclical movement of an organism between distinct regions for different purposes over its lifetime, dispersal is the one-directional movement of an organism as one point in its lifetime (e.g. larval dispersal, seed dispersal)

74
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T/F: trade-offs must be made at the individual level in response to fecundity, growth, and longevity

True

75
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T/F: ectotherms derive body temperature from internal heat production

false

76
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T/F: fur, blubber, and hibernation are all examples of anatomical features of animals to maintain homeostasis

false

77
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T/F: when N=(1/2)K under logistic growth, the population growth is the slowest

False

78
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T/F: competitive exclusion principle states two species with identical needs cannot co-exist indefinitely

true

79
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wildebeest in the Serengeti plains of africa have historically been kept at low numbers by a disease called rinderprest. wildebeest are a major grazer of the grasses in the serengeti. in the 1960s, a campaign to eradicate the rinderpest disease in the area was successful, leading to greatly increased wildebeest numbers. what effect would you predict for grasses as a result of rinderpest eradication?

a. fewer grasses

b. more grasses

c. at first more grasses, and then fewer over time

d. no change

consider the scenario from the previous question. the more grasses there are, the more fires sweep through the serengeti, affecting both grasses and trees growing in the plains. with the understanding that the trees are fire-resistant, what indirect effect would likely happen for trees as a result of rinderpest eradication?

a. fewer trees

b. more trees

c. loss of all trees

d. no change

Q1: a. fewer grasses

Q2: b. more trees

80
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during our catalina trip, we were introduced to the sub-field of nocturnal ecology. which of the following is NOT a benefit specific for a nocturnal animal species?

a. temporal niche partitioning

b. spatial niche partitioning

c. decreased water loss

d. easier to hunt prey

b. spatial niche partitioning

81
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In the video 'How wolves change rivers' (watched in lecture), the extirpation of grey wolves from

Yellowstone National Park released deer from predation pressure and resulted in a boom in the deer population. The increase in deer caused a decline in aspen and willow trees, which subsequently caused the destabilization of the riverbanks and decline in a wide diversity of tree-dwelling bird species. This change in the food webs is an example of which of these:

a. supply-side cascade

b. bottom-up cascade

c. trophic cascade

d. behavioral cascade

c. trophic cascade

82
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A plant living in an environment with a low frequency of disturbances and low level of stress fits into which

plant life history category?

a. ruderal

b. competitive

c. stress tolerant

d. neutral

b. competitive

83
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In the Lotka-Volterra model for cyclic predator-prey interactions, there is a lag period between the two

interacting populations (lines). Which line represents the predator and why?

a. the dotted line; predators are the controlling factor in this model

b. The solid line; there is a delay in the time it takes for a predator to reproduce

c. The dotted line; predators are inefficient hunters and thus increase first

d. The solid line; density-dependent limitations due to outside factors

b. The solid line; there is a delay in the time it takes for a predator to reproduce

<p>b. The solid line; there is a delay in the time it takes for a predator to reproduce</p>
84
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From our Catalina trip's kayak activity, what oceanographic process fuels the high productivity of kelp

forest along the western coast of North America?

a. ocean gyres

b. coriolis effect

c. upwelling

d. downwelling

c. upwelling

85
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During our Saturday afternoon activity around Wrigley marine station, what group of organisms did we dig

for and describe based on number of legs, body length, and description?

a. decomposers

b. primary producers

c. primary consumers

d. worms

a. decomposers

86
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From our Catalina trip, which of the following animals that we saw (collectively as a class) is a non-native

species to the island?

a. raven

b. california spiny lobster

c. milk snail

d. foundational species

c. milk snail