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Jeopardy - Relationships, Biomes, and Vocabulary

Test your knowledge of relationships, biomes, and vocabulary in this Jeopardy-style quiz game. Answer questions related to predator-prey relationships, food webs, reproductive potential, and more.

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Jeopardy - Relationships, Biomes, and Vocabulary

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  1. Jeopardy Choose a category. You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question. Click to begin.

  2. Choose a point value. Choose a point value. Click here for Final Jeopardy

  3. Relationships Biomes P, C, or M Pyramid Reproductive Potential Vocabulary 10 Point 10 Point 10 Point 10 Point 10 Point 10 Point 20 Points 20 Points 20 Points 20 Points 20 Points 20 Points 30 Points 30 Points 30 Points 30 Points 30 Points 30 Points 40 Points 40 Points 40 Points 40 Points 40 Points 40 Points 50 Points 50 Points 50 Points 50 Points 50 Points 50 Points

  4. In a relationship between a turkey and a grasshopper the grasshopper is the ____. • Abiotic Factor • Predator • Prey • Producer

  5. C. Prey

  6. When a hawk and a coyote live in the same community where mice are scarce, they are ___. • Competitors • Herbivores • Producers • Omnivores

  7. A. Competitors

  8. A series of overlapping food chains is called a(n) ___.

  9. Food Web

  10. ___ are the first link of any food chain.

  11. Producers

  12. When an animal is able to blend in to it’s surrounding environment.

  13. Camouflage

  14. Snowy owls, caribou, lichen, permafrost

  15. Tundra

  16. Eastern U.S., Europe, bear, deer, raccoon

  17. Deciduous forest

  18. Pine trees, grizzly bear, elk, moose, Yellowstone National Park

  19. Coniferous forest or Taiga

  20. Cactus, small shrubs, dry, kangaroo rats

  21. Desert

  22. Variety of grasses, prairie dogs, Central U.S.

  23. Grasslands

  24. A tick burrows into the skin of a deer. The tick feeds on the blood of the deer and transmits disease.

  25. Parasitism

  26. The woodpecker eats the moth that feeds on the Saguaro cactus. The cactus provides the bird with a safe habitat.

  27. Mutualism

  28. Grape vines attach to White Oak trees. The grape vines extract water and nutrients from the tree, eventually killing the tree.

  29. Parasitism

  30. Snails make their own shells. Hermit crabs live in abandoned snail shells. This does not help or hurt the snails.

  31. Commensalism

  32. Herds of gazelles and wildebeest feed and move together. The herds alert each other to danger.

  33. Mutualism

  34. This level receives energy directly from the sun.

  35. Producers or D

  36. The level that represents a plant eater (herbivore).

  37. 1st order consumer or C

  38. The level that has the most energy available.

  39. Producers or D

  40. The level that represents the top predator.

  41. 3rd order consumer or A

  42. Which level has the least amount of energy.

  43. 3rd order consumer or A

  44. A condition, such as the quality or amount of water or food that determines what animals can survive in the environment.

  45. Limiting Factor

  46. The theoretical unlimited growth of a population over time.

  47. Reproductive Potential

  48. You need to calculate the reproductive potential of a camel . List two facts you need to know about a camel in order to find the reproductive potential.

  49. Age of maturity Birthrate Life span Population size Sex ratio Gestation or the number of times a year they reproduce.

  50. List two abiotic limiting factors that may affect the deciduous forest.

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