Semester 2, Day 4 Population and Review
Homework Cornell Notes on Section 2.2 Questions 1-5 on Section 2.2
Quiz Question 1: Given a word bank, draw and LABEL a diagram of the water cycle. Questions 2-3: Label the cycles correctly. You are given a word bank. Question 4: short answer
Reading/Work Time Cornell notes on 4.1 and 4.2 Answer following questions: Section 4.1: #1-6 Section 4.2: #1-6 Chapter 4 Assessment: #1-15, Section 4.1: Population Dynamics Vocab #1 Vocab #2 Important Concept #1 Important Concept #2 Definition definition definition definition definition Description description description description Summary: Summarize findings in 3-5 sentences. Summarize findings in 3-5 sentences. Summarize findings in 3-5 sentences. Summarize findings in 3-5 sentences. Summarize findings in 3-5 sentences.
Review of Ecology Students are struggling with vocabulary and describing concepts Vocab Sheets Vocab/ConceptDefinition/Description Ecological Levels of OrganizationDescribe our world from smallest to largest OrganismSingle individual PopulationGroup of same species at same time in same space CommunityAll living species in an area EcosystemLiving and non-living factors in the same area BiosphereLayer of earth where all living things are Water CycleDescribes how water circulates between living and non-living things
Ecology Vocab Cell Properties of Life Bacteria Archaea Plants Animals Fungi Protists Ecological Levels of Organization Organism Population Biological Community Ecosystem Biosphere Ecology Biotic Factors Abiotic Factors Biodiversity Habitat Changes in habitat Climate Changes Human Activity Non-Native Species Population Size Rates that increase pop. Size Rates that decrease pop. Size Graphs of Births & Deaths Autotrophs Phototrophs Chemotrophs Energy Heterotrophs Herbivore Carnivore Omnviore Deteritivore Decomposers Food Chain Food Web Direction of Arrow Trophic Levels Primary producer Primary consumer Secondary consumer Tertiary consumer Energy pyramid Biomass pyramid Numbers pyramid Biogeochemical Cycles Water Carbon & Oxygen Phosphorus Nitrogen Importance of water, carbon, oxygen, phosphorus, & nitrogen