competitionsituation whentwo organismsor two speciescompete for thesame resourcepopulationgroup oforganisms ofthe samespecies living inthe samehabitatnitrogencycles fromliving to non-living onEarth & theatmospherephotosynthesisprocess by whichplants convertwater and carbondioxide into sugarsand oxygenabioticnonlivingcomponents inan ecosysteminclude water,temperature,and sunlight ruleof 10% of energypasses tothe nexttrophic levelrangetotal of allareas wherea specieslives commensalismrelationship betweentwo species whereone species benefitswhile the otherspecies is neitherharmed nor helpedparasitismrelationshipbetween twospecies where onespecies benefitswhile the other isharmed cellularrespirationseries of chemicalreactions in a cellthat break downsugars andrelease energydecomposersorganism that getsits food from deadorganisms andwastes from livingorganismsecologistScientistwhostudiesecologyfoodwebdiagram thatmodels feedingrelationshipswithin anecosystempredator/preyrelationshipwhere oneorganismconsumesanotherlocation in anenvironmentwhere anorganismliveshabitatresourcefactor thatcan beconsumed orused by anorganism ecologylivingorganisms +theirenvironmentmutualismrelationshipbetween twospecies whereboth speciesbenefit bioticlivingcomponents inan ecosystemare theorganismssymbiosisthe close andoften long-terminteractionbetween twospeciesbiodiversityvariety of lifeat every level,from genes tospecies toecosystems consumersorganismthat gets itsfood fromeating otherorganismsecosystemis a communityof livingorganisms andthe physicalenvironmentbacteriadecomposers+ keycomponentsof nitrogencycleproducersorganismthatproduces itsown foodcompetitionsituation whentwo organismsor two speciescompete for thesame resourcepopulationgroup oforganisms ofthe samespecies living inthe samehabitatnitrogencycles fromliving to non-living onEarth & theatmospherephotosynthesisprocess by whichplants convertwater and carbondioxide into sugarsand oxygenabioticnonlivingcomponents inan ecosysteminclude water,temperature,and sunlight ruleof 10% of energypasses tothe nexttrophic levelrangetotal of allareas wherea specieslives commensalismrelationship betweentwo species whereone species benefitswhile the otherspecies is neitherharmed nor helpedparasitismrelationshipbetween twospecies where onespecies benefitswhile the other isharmed cellularrespirationseries of chemicalreactions in a cellthat break downsugars andrelease energydecomposersorganism that getsits food from deadorganisms andwastes from livingorganismsecologistScientistwhostudiesecologyfoodwebdiagram thatmodels feedingrelationshipswithin anecosystempredator/preyrelationshipwhere oneorganismconsumesanotherlocation in anenvironmentwhere anorganismliveshabitatresourcefactor thatcan beconsumed orused by anorganism ecologylivingorganisms +theirenvironmentmutualismrelationshipbetween twospecies whereboth speciesbenefit bioticlivingcomponents inan ecosystemare theorganismssymbiosisthe close andoften long-terminteractionbetween twospeciesbiodiversityvariety of lifeat every level,from genes tospecies toecosystems consumersorganismthat gets itsfood fromeating otherorganismsecosystemis a communityof livingorganisms andthe physicalenvironmentbacteriadecomposers+ keycomponentsof nitrogencycleproducersorganismthatproduces itsown food

ECO BINGO - Call List

(Print) Use this randomly generated list as your call list when playing the game. There is no need to say the BINGO column name. Place some kind of mark (like an X, a checkmark, a dot, tally mark, etc) on each cell as you announce it, to keep track. You can also cut out each item, place them in a bag and pull words from the bag.


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  1. situation when two organisms or two species compete for the same resource
    competition
  2. group of organisms of the same species living in the same habitat
    population
  3. cycles from living to non-living on Earth & the atmosphere
    nitrogen
  4. process by which plants convert water and carbon dioxide into sugars and oxygen
    photosynthesis
  5. nonliving components in an ecosystem include water, temperature, and sunlight
    abiotic
  6. % of energy passes to the next trophic level
    rule of 10
  7. total of all areas where a species lives
    range
  8. relationship between two species where one species benefits while the other species is neither harmed nor helped
    commensalism
  9. relationship between two species where one species benefits while the other is harmed
    parasitism
  10. series of chemical reactions in a cell that break down sugars and release energy
    cellular respiration
  11. organism that gets its food from dead organisms and wastes from living organisms
    decomposers
  12. Scientist who studies ecology
    ecologist
  13. diagram that models feeding relationships within an ecosystem
    food web
  14. relationship where one organism consumes another
    predator/prey
  15. habitat
    location in an environment where an organism lives
  16. factor that can be consumed or used by an organism
    resource
  17. living organisms + their environment
    ecology
  18. relationship between two species where both species benefit
    mutualism
  19. living components in an ecosystem are the organisms
    biotic
  20. the close and often long-term interaction between two species
    symbiosis
  21. variety of life at every level, from genes to species to ecosystems
    biodiversity
  22. organism that gets its food from eating other organisms
    consumers
  23. is a community of living organisms and the physical environment
    ecosystem
  24. decomposers + key components of nitrogen cycle
    bacteria
  25. organism that produces its own food
    producers