Deck 20: Movement of Energy in Ecosystems 

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Question
What proportion of solar radiation captured by photosynthesis is used for plant growth and reproduction?

A) 60 percent
B) 80 percent
C) 50 percent
D) 40 percent
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Question
Why can plants use only a small portion of the light energy that strikes the surface of a leaf?
Question
Terrestrial secondary productivity is _____ correlated with primary productivity, and aquatic secondary productivity is _____ correlated with primary productivity.

A) positively; positively
B) positively; negatively
C) negatively; negatively
D) negatively; positively
Question
Why have non-native earthworms caused a decline in salamander populations in North America?

A) Earthworms are predators of newly hatched salamanders.
B) Earthworms caused reductions in insects that salamanders eat.
C) Earthworms disturb soil, which makes it less hospitable to salamanders.
D) Earthworms outcompete salamanders for soil nutrients.
Question
Which of the following is NOT used to measure primary production?

A) uptake and release of O2
B) net movement of 14C
C) release of CO2
D) changes in standing crop
Question
What is the source of most energy that moves through ecosystems?

A) oceans
B) soil nutrients
C) the Sun
D) Earth's core
Question
The rate at which solar or chemical energy is captured and converted to chemical bonds by photosynthesis or chemosynthesis is called

A) secondary productivity.
B) net primary productivity.
C) gross primary productivity.
D) primary productivity
Question
Measuring the change in biomass from the beginning to the end of the growing season gives an estimate of

A) herbivory.
B) standing crop.
C) gross primary productivity.
D) net primary productivity.
Question
Which technique allows measurement of conditions on Earth from a distant location?

A) remote sensing
B) remote monitoring
C) satellite sensing
D) satellite monitoring
Question
Standing crop is determined by _____ productivity.

A) net primary
B) gross primary
C) net secondary
D) gross secondary
Question
The rate of consumer biomass accumulation in a given area is called _____ productivity.

A) gross secondary
B) net secondary
C) gross primary
D) net primary
Question
Energy that an organism uses to add to its biomass is

A) egested.
B) respired.
C) assimilated.
D) secondary.
Question
Which of the following units is commonly used to express GPP?

A) kJ/m2/y
B) kPa/m2/y
C) kg/m2/y
D) kmol/m2/y
Question
Which is the portion of energy that an organism uses to maintain its body temperature?

A) primary
B) secondary
C) egested
D) respired
Question
Net primary productivity is calculated as

A) GPP ÷ respiration.
B) GPP × respiration.
C) respiration - GPP.
D) GPP - respiration.
Question
The biomass of producers in a given area of an ecosystem at a particular moment is called

A) net primary production.
B) ecosystem mass.
C) the standing crop.
D) the standing harvest.
Question
What percentage of solar energy is captured by plants for photosynthesis?

A) 50 percent
B) 1 percent
C) 99 percent
D) 25 percent
Question
Terrestrial primary productivity can be quantified by measuring the uptake and release of

A) carbon dioxide.
B) water vapor.
C) nitrate.
D) methane.
Question
When an animal eats fruit with hard seeds that cannot be digested and are excreted whole as a waste product, the seeds constitute _____ energy.

A) assimilated
B) egested
C) respired
D) kinetic
Question
Which of the following factors is NOT used for quantifying primary productivity over time?

A) the change in consumer biomass
B) the change in producer biomass
C) the movement of carbon dioxide
D) the movement of oxygen
Question
Experiments on how soil fertility limits terrestrial NPP demonstrate that _____ constrain(s) NPP.

A) nitrogen
B) phosphorus
C) nitrogen and phosphorus
D) micronutrients
Question
Iron is lost from oceans when it combines with _____ and precipitates.

A) nitrogen
B) silicon
C) phosphorus
D) carbon
Question
Aquatic ecosystems can be limited by silicon because

A) there are few silicon organisms in the upper waters.
B) many organisms compete for the silicon.
C) silicon sinks slower than nitrogen or phosphorus.
D) silicon sinks faster than nitrogen or phosphorus.
Question
Which of the following is NOT a low-productivity aquatic ecosystem?

A) open ocean
B) coral reef
C) forest stream
D) deep ocean
Question
Aquatic NPP is primarily limited by

A) fertility.
B) light.
C) temperature.
D) salinity.
Question
Which of the following ecosystems has the highest levels of primary productivity?

A) coral reef
B) swamp
C) lake
D) salt marsh
Question
What are the major drivers of NPP?

A) fertility and precipitation
B) temperature and pH
C) temperature and precipitation
D) fertility and temperature
Question
Which of the following is NOT a high-productivity aquatic ecosystem?

A) estuary
B) coral reef
C) salt marsh
D) open ocean
Question
Terrestrial NPP is greatest in _____ ecosystems, and aquatic NPP is greatest in _____ ecosystems.

A) tropical; coastal
B) tropical; open-water
C) polar; tropical
D) tropical; tropical
Question
Which of the following ecosystems has the lowest levels of primary productivity?

A) desert scrub
B) temperate grassland
C) savanna
D) tundra
Question
Between latitudes of 30° N and 30° S, NPP is primarily constrained by

A) temperature.
B) fertility.
C) pH.
D) precipitation.
Question
A terrestrial ecosystem has an NPP of 850 g C/m2/y and respiration of 1.25 kg C/m2/y. What is the ecosystem GPP in kilograms per meter squared per second?
Question
What nutrient fertilization has been discussed as a way to counteract global warming? How would the nutrient(s) affect global warming, and what are the drawbacks, if any?
Question
In addition to nitrogen and phosphorus, what nutrients can limit productivity in the open ocean?

A) silicon and magnesium
B) silicon and iron
C) manganese and iron
D) molybdenum and manganese
Question
NPP varies with _____ around the world.

A) elevation
B) soil type
C) longitude
D) latitude
Question
Compilation of data from many experiments on nutrients and NPP in marine ecosystems shows that ecosystems with hard bottoms are generally limited by _____, while soft-bottomed ecosystems are generally limited by _____.

A) nitrogen; phosphorus
B) nitrogen; nitrogen and phosphorus
C) phosphorus; nitrogen
D) phosphorus; nitrogen and phosphorus
Question
  (Figure 20.9) The figure shows that as mean annual temperature increases, net primary productivity also increases. Net primary productivity increases with mean annual precipitation until approximately 3 meters of precipitation, after which productivity declines. Why does this decline occur?<div style=padding-top: 35px> (Figure 20.9) The figure shows that as mean annual temperature increases, net primary productivity also increases. Net primary productivity increases with mean annual precipitation until approximately 3 meters of precipitation, after which productivity declines. Why does this decline occur?
Question
What is the primary reason that estuaries and coral reefs are so productive?

A) high temperatures due to tropical location
B) low levels of herbivory
C) high light levels due to shallow waters
D) high nutrient levels from runoff
Question
In fertilization experiments in a lake in Ontario, which of the following nutrients were shown to have the greatest limitation on productivity?

A) nitrogen
B) carbon
C) phosphorus
D) All three nutrients equally limited productivity.
Question
Silicon is used primarily by

A) zooxanthellae.
B) zooplankton.
C) diatoms.
D) algae.
Question
What accounts for the pyramid shape of the diagram that represents energy in trophic groups in an ecosystem?

A) Energy produced by consumers is greater than energy stored by producers.
B) Energy stored by consumers is greater than energy stored by producers.
C) Energy is gained as it moves from one trophic level to the next.
D) Energy is lost as it moves from one trophic level to the next.
Question
The study of the balance of nutrients in ecological interactions is called

A) ecosystem ecology.
B) ecological stoichiometry.
C) chemical ecology.
D) stoichiometric biochemistry.
Question
Energy (J)
Terrestrial Ecosystem
Aquatic Ecosystem
Net production available in lower trophic level
1,500
1,500
Consumed energy
375
826
Assimilated energy
260
550
Net production energy
84
210
Calculate in joules the four types of ecological efficiencies for the terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems from the table. Which ecosystem is more ecologically efficient?
Question
Assimilation energy is the percentage of consumed energy that is

A) used for reproduction.
B) digested and absorbed.
C) used for growth.
D) consumed by the next higher trophic level.
Question
The average energy residence time is calculated as

A) energy in a trophic level times net productivity.
B) net productivity times energy in a trophic level.
C) energy in a trophic level divided by net productivity.
D) net productivity divided by energy present in a trophic level.
Question
The percentage of energy or biomass in a trophic level that is consumed by the next higher trophic level is called _____ efficiency.

A) consumption
B) predation
C) assimilation
D) net production
Question
Consumption efficiency is calculated as

A) consumed energy times net production energy of the next lower trophic level.
B) net production energy of the next lower trophic level divided by consumed energy.
C) consumed energy divided by net production energy of the next higher trophic level.
D) consumed energy divided by net production energy of the next lower trophic level.
Question
As a rule of thumb, ecologists use _____ as a value for food chain efficiency.

A) 10 percent
B) 25 percent
C) 15 percent
D) 20 percent
Question
The lowest level in marine trophic pyramids is

A) phytoplankton.
B) zooplankton.
C) pelagic fish.
D) periplankton.
Question
Food chain efficiency is the percentage of _____ from one trophic level compared to the next _____ trophic level.

A) net production; higher
B) net production; lower
C) consumed energy; higher
D) consumed energy; lower
Question
Aquatic ecosystems typically have _____ trophic levels, while terrestrial ecosystems typically have _____ trophic levels.

A) two; three
B) four; five
C) three or four; six
D) five; three or four
Question
Net production energy divided by assimilation energy is _____ efficiency.

A) consumption
B) assimilation
C) net assimilation
D) net production
Question
Red abalone (Haliotis rufescens) has a ratio of nitrogen to phosphorus of 45:1. The abalone consumes giant kelp (Macrocystis pyrifera), which has a ratio of nitrogen to phosphorus of 20:1. Would you expect this trophic level to have a high or low ecological efficiency? Why?
Question
Why when measuring primary productivity is O2 uptake perhaps a more reliable technique than CO2 uptake?
Question
What is at the top level of a four-level, terrestrial trophic pyramid?

A) quaternary consumers
B) tertiary consumers
C) secondary consumers
D) producers
Question
Biomass residence time is the length of time that

A) biomass takes to move through the food chain.
B) energy takes to move through the food chain.
C) energy spends in a given trophic level.
D) biomass spends in a given trophic level.
Question
In which ecosystem does leaf litter have the shortest residence time?

A) humid tropical forest
B) temperate forest
C) dry tropical forest
D) boreal forest
Question
Differentiate between gross primary productivity (GPP) and net primary productivity (NPP).
Question
Ecological efficiency is also called _____ efficiency.

A) trophic pyramid
B) food chain
C) assimilation
D) net production
Question
In aquatic ecosystems, trophic pyramids of biomass are inverted because

A) most biomass is found in the producers.
B) the standing biomass of algae is lower than the standing biomass of consumers.
C) the life span of producers is very long compared to that of consumers.
D) consumers do not rapidly consume producers.
Question
In terms of NPP (net primary productivity), the most productive terrestrial systems are found in _____, while the most productive aquatic systems are found in _____.

A) temperate forests; open ocean
B) boreal forest; salt marshes
C) savannas; coral reefs
D) tropical forests; freshwater marshes
Question
Researchers have found that whales consume approximately _____ of the ocean's NPP (net primary productivity).

A) 88 percent
B) 50 percent
C) 12 percent
D) 3 percent
Question
The decline of red-backed salamanders in some regions of eastern North America appears to be related to

A) an increase in non-native earthworms.
B) an increase in predatory songbirds like the ovenbird.
C) a decrease in forest productivity.
D) an increase in forest nutrient cycling by bacteria and fungi.
Question
When looking at net production efficiencies, we would likely

A) see homeotherms having a higher efficiency than poikilotherms.
B) see homeotherms having a lower efficiency than poikilotherms.
C) see homeotherms and poikilotherms having the same net production efficiencies.
D) not be able to determine since net production efficiencies cannot be quantified for poikilotherms.

Question
Using remote sensing, an ecosystem with high absorption of blue and red wavelengths and high reflectance of green reflectance would likely be found

A) in the polar regions.
B) in the tropical rainforest.
C) in the desert.
D) in the open ocean.
Question
The 10 percent ecological efficiency rule of thumb has implications for humans in what way?

A) The 10 percent rule can instruct humans as to which systems need the most protection.
B) Understanding the 10 percent rule might protect species from extinction.
C) Recognizing the 10 percent efficiency rule may provide insight into future human diets on an increasingly populated planet.
D) The 10 percent ecological efficiency rule points to the open ocean as a means to increase worldwide food production.
Question
Why do aquatic systems tend to have more trophic levels than terrestrial systems?
Question
What term describes the total mass of trees, shrubs, herbaceous plants, and grasses present in a given forest on a given day?

A) NPP, or net primary productivity
B) GPP, or gross primary productivity
C) primary productivity
D) standing crop
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Deck 20: Movement of Energy in Ecosystems 
1
What proportion of solar radiation captured by photosynthesis is used for plant growth and reproduction?

A) 60 percent
B) 80 percent
C) 50 percent
D) 40 percent
D
2
Why can plants use only a small portion of the light energy that strikes the surface of a leaf?
not answered
3
Terrestrial secondary productivity is _____ correlated with primary productivity, and aquatic secondary productivity is _____ correlated with primary productivity.

A) positively; positively
B) positively; negatively
C) negatively; negatively
D) negatively; positively
A
4
Why have non-native earthworms caused a decline in salamander populations in North America?

A) Earthworms are predators of newly hatched salamanders.
B) Earthworms caused reductions in insects that salamanders eat.
C) Earthworms disturb soil, which makes it less hospitable to salamanders.
D) Earthworms outcompete salamanders for soil nutrients.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
5
Which of the following is NOT used to measure primary production?

A) uptake and release of O2
B) net movement of 14C
C) release of CO2
D) changes in standing crop
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
What is the source of most energy that moves through ecosystems?

A) oceans
B) soil nutrients
C) the Sun
D) Earth's core
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k this deck
7
The rate at which solar or chemical energy is captured and converted to chemical bonds by photosynthesis or chemosynthesis is called

A) secondary productivity.
B) net primary productivity.
C) gross primary productivity.
D) primary productivity
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k this deck
8
Measuring the change in biomass from the beginning to the end of the growing season gives an estimate of

A) herbivory.
B) standing crop.
C) gross primary productivity.
D) net primary productivity.
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k this deck
9
Which technique allows measurement of conditions on Earth from a distant location?

A) remote sensing
B) remote monitoring
C) satellite sensing
D) satellite monitoring
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10
Standing crop is determined by _____ productivity.

A) net primary
B) gross primary
C) net secondary
D) gross secondary
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11
The rate of consumer biomass accumulation in a given area is called _____ productivity.

A) gross secondary
B) net secondary
C) gross primary
D) net primary
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12
Energy that an organism uses to add to its biomass is

A) egested.
B) respired.
C) assimilated.
D) secondary.
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13
Which of the following units is commonly used to express GPP?

A) kJ/m2/y
B) kPa/m2/y
C) kg/m2/y
D) kmol/m2/y
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14
Which is the portion of energy that an organism uses to maintain its body temperature?

A) primary
B) secondary
C) egested
D) respired
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15
Net primary productivity is calculated as

A) GPP ÷ respiration.
B) GPP × respiration.
C) respiration - GPP.
D) GPP - respiration.
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16
The biomass of producers in a given area of an ecosystem at a particular moment is called

A) net primary production.
B) ecosystem mass.
C) the standing crop.
D) the standing harvest.
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17
What percentage of solar energy is captured by plants for photosynthesis?

A) 50 percent
B) 1 percent
C) 99 percent
D) 25 percent
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18
Terrestrial primary productivity can be quantified by measuring the uptake and release of

A) carbon dioxide.
B) water vapor.
C) nitrate.
D) methane.
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19
When an animal eats fruit with hard seeds that cannot be digested and are excreted whole as a waste product, the seeds constitute _____ energy.

A) assimilated
B) egested
C) respired
D) kinetic
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20
Which of the following factors is NOT used for quantifying primary productivity over time?

A) the change in consumer biomass
B) the change in producer biomass
C) the movement of carbon dioxide
D) the movement of oxygen
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21
Experiments on how soil fertility limits terrestrial NPP demonstrate that _____ constrain(s) NPP.

A) nitrogen
B) phosphorus
C) nitrogen and phosphorus
D) micronutrients
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22
Iron is lost from oceans when it combines with _____ and precipitates.

A) nitrogen
B) silicon
C) phosphorus
D) carbon
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23
Aquatic ecosystems can be limited by silicon because

A) there are few silicon organisms in the upper waters.
B) many organisms compete for the silicon.
C) silicon sinks slower than nitrogen or phosphorus.
D) silicon sinks faster than nitrogen or phosphorus.
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24
Which of the following is NOT a low-productivity aquatic ecosystem?

A) open ocean
B) coral reef
C) forest stream
D) deep ocean
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25
Aquatic NPP is primarily limited by

A) fertility.
B) light.
C) temperature.
D) salinity.
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26
Which of the following ecosystems has the highest levels of primary productivity?

A) coral reef
B) swamp
C) lake
D) salt marsh
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27
What are the major drivers of NPP?

A) fertility and precipitation
B) temperature and pH
C) temperature and precipitation
D) fertility and temperature
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28
Which of the following is NOT a high-productivity aquatic ecosystem?

A) estuary
B) coral reef
C) salt marsh
D) open ocean
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29
Terrestrial NPP is greatest in _____ ecosystems, and aquatic NPP is greatest in _____ ecosystems.

A) tropical; coastal
B) tropical; open-water
C) polar; tropical
D) tropical; tropical
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30
Which of the following ecosystems has the lowest levels of primary productivity?

A) desert scrub
B) temperate grassland
C) savanna
D) tundra
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31
Between latitudes of 30° N and 30° S, NPP is primarily constrained by

A) temperature.
B) fertility.
C) pH.
D) precipitation.
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32
A terrestrial ecosystem has an NPP of 850 g C/m2/y and respiration of 1.25 kg C/m2/y. What is the ecosystem GPP in kilograms per meter squared per second?
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33
What nutrient fertilization has been discussed as a way to counteract global warming? How would the nutrient(s) affect global warming, and what are the drawbacks, if any?
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34
In addition to nitrogen and phosphorus, what nutrients can limit productivity in the open ocean?

A) silicon and magnesium
B) silicon and iron
C) manganese and iron
D) molybdenum and manganese
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35
NPP varies with _____ around the world.

A) elevation
B) soil type
C) longitude
D) latitude
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36
Compilation of data from many experiments on nutrients and NPP in marine ecosystems shows that ecosystems with hard bottoms are generally limited by _____, while soft-bottomed ecosystems are generally limited by _____.

A) nitrogen; phosphorus
B) nitrogen; nitrogen and phosphorus
C) phosphorus; nitrogen
D) phosphorus; nitrogen and phosphorus
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37
  (Figure 20.9) The figure shows that as mean annual temperature increases, net primary productivity also increases. Net primary productivity increases with mean annual precipitation until approximately 3 meters of precipitation, after which productivity declines. Why does this decline occur? (Figure 20.9) The figure shows that as mean annual temperature increases, net primary productivity also increases. Net primary productivity increases with mean annual precipitation until approximately 3 meters of precipitation, after which productivity declines. Why does this decline occur?
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38
What is the primary reason that estuaries and coral reefs are so productive?

A) high temperatures due to tropical location
B) low levels of herbivory
C) high light levels due to shallow waters
D) high nutrient levels from runoff
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39
In fertilization experiments in a lake in Ontario, which of the following nutrients were shown to have the greatest limitation on productivity?

A) nitrogen
B) carbon
C) phosphorus
D) All three nutrients equally limited productivity.
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40
Silicon is used primarily by

A) zooxanthellae.
B) zooplankton.
C) diatoms.
D) algae.
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k this deck
41
What accounts for the pyramid shape of the diagram that represents energy in trophic groups in an ecosystem?

A) Energy produced by consumers is greater than energy stored by producers.
B) Energy stored by consumers is greater than energy stored by producers.
C) Energy is gained as it moves from one trophic level to the next.
D) Energy is lost as it moves from one trophic level to the next.
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42
The study of the balance of nutrients in ecological interactions is called

A) ecosystem ecology.
B) ecological stoichiometry.
C) chemical ecology.
D) stoichiometric biochemistry.
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43
Energy (J)
Terrestrial Ecosystem
Aquatic Ecosystem
Net production available in lower trophic level
1,500
1,500
Consumed energy
375
826
Assimilated energy
260
550
Net production energy
84
210
Calculate in joules the four types of ecological efficiencies for the terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems from the table. Which ecosystem is more ecologically efficient?
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44
Assimilation energy is the percentage of consumed energy that is

A) used for reproduction.
B) digested and absorbed.
C) used for growth.
D) consumed by the next higher trophic level.
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45
The average energy residence time is calculated as

A) energy in a trophic level times net productivity.
B) net productivity times energy in a trophic level.
C) energy in a trophic level divided by net productivity.
D) net productivity divided by energy present in a trophic level.
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46
The percentage of energy or biomass in a trophic level that is consumed by the next higher trophic level is called _____ efficiency.

A) consumption
B) predation
C) assimilation
D) net production
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47
Consumption efficiency is calculated as

A) consumed energy times net production energy of the next lower trophic level.
B) net production energy of the next lower trophic level divided by consumed energy.
C) consumed energy divided by net production energy of the next higher trophic level.
D) consumed energy divided by net production energy of the next lower trophic level.
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48
As a rule of thumb, ecologists use _____ as a value for food chain efficiency.

A) 10 percent
B) 25 percent
C) 15 percent
D) 20 percent
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49
The lowest level in marine trophic pyramids is

A) phytoplankton.
B) zooplankton.
C) pelagic fish.
D) periplankton.
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50
Food chain efficiency is the percentage of _____ from one trophic level compared to the next _____ trophic level.

A) net production; higher
B) net production; lower
C) consumed energy; higher
D) consumed energy; lower
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51
Aquatic ecosystems typically have _____ trophic levels, while terrestrial ecosystems typically have _____ trophic levels.

A) two; three
B) four; five
C) three or four; six
D) five; three or four
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52
Net production energy divided by assimilation energy is _____ efficiency.

A) consumption
B) assimilation
C) net assimilation
D) net production
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53
Red abalone (Haliotis rufescens) has a ratio of nitrogen to phosphorus of 45:1. The abalone consumes giant kelp (Macrocystis pyrifera), which has a ratio of nitrogen to phosphorus of 20:1. Would you expect this trophic level to have a high or low ecological efficiency? Why?
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54
Why when measuring primary productivity is O2 uptake perhaps a more reliable technique than CO2 uptake?
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55
What is at the top level of a four-level, terrestrial trophic pyramid?

A) quaternary consumers
B) tertiary consumers
C) secondary consumers
D) producers
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56
Biomass residence time is the length of time that

A) biomass takes to move through the food chain.
B) energy takes to move through the food chain.
C) energy spends in a given trophic level.
D) biomass spends in a given trophic level.
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57
In which ecosystem does leaf litter have the shortest residence time?

A) humid tropical forest
B) temperate forest
C) dry tropical forest
D) boreal forest
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58
Differentiate between gross primary productivity (GPP) and net primary productivity (NPP).
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59
Ecological efficiency is also called _____ efficiency.

A) trophic pyramid
B) food chain
C) assimilation
D) net production
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60
In aquatic ecosystems, trophic pyramids of biomass are inverted because

A) most biomass is found in the producers.
B) the standing biomass of algae is lower than the standing biomass of consumers.
C) the life span of producers is very long compared to that of consumers.
D) consumers do not rapidly consume producers.
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61
In terms of NPP (net primary productivity), the most productive terrestrial systems are found in _____, while the most productive aquatic systems are found in _____.

A) temperate forests; open ocean
B) boreal forest; salt marshes
C) savannas; coral reefs
D) tropical forests; freshwater marshes
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62
Researchers have found that whales consume approximately _____ of the ocean's NPP (net primary productivity).

A) 88 percent
B) 50 percent
C) 12 percent
D) 3 percent
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63
The decline of red-backed salamanders in some regions of eastern North America appears to be related to

A) an increase in non-native earthworms.
B) an increase in predatory songbirds like the ovenbird.
C) a decrease in forest productivity.
D) an increase in forest nutrient cycling by bacteria and fungi.
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64
When looking at net production efficiencies, we would likely

A) see homeotherms having a higher efficiency than poikilotherms.
B) see homeotherms having a lower efficiency than poikilotherms.
C) see homeotherms and poikilotherms having the same net production efficiencies.
D) not be able to determine since net production efficiencies cannot be quantified for poikilotherms.

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65
Using remote sensing, an ecosystem with high absorption of blue and red wavelengths and high reflectance of green reflectance would likely be found

A) in the polar regions.
B) in the tropical rainforest.
C) in the desert.
D) in the open ocean.
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66
The 10 percent ecological efficiency rule of thumb has implications for humans in what way?

A) The 10 percent rule can instruct humans as to which systems need the most protection.
B) Understanding the 10 percent rule might protect species from extinction.
C) Recognizing the 10 percent efficiency rule may provide insight into future human diets on an increasingly populated planet.
D) The 10 percent ecological efficiency rule points to the open ocean as a means to increase worldwide food production.
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67
Why do aquatic systems tend to have more trophic levels than terrestrial systems?
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68
What term describes the total mass of trees, shrubs, herbaceous plants, and grasses present in a given forest on a given day?

A) NPP, or net primary productivity
B) GPP, or gross primary productivity
C) primary productivity
D) standing crop
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