Populations and Resources Unit Test

Populations and Resources Unit Test

6th Grade

15 Qs

quiz-placeholder

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Populations and Resources Unit Test

Populations and Resources Unit Test

Assessment

Quiz

Science

6th Grade

Hard

NGSS
MS-LS2-1, MS-LS1-4, MS-LS2-4

+2

Standards-aligned

Created by

Lisa Thompson

FREE Resource

15 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

Media Image

In a rainforest, anteaters eat ants, and ants eat aphids (a type of very small insect). The sizes of the populations have been stable for the last 10 years, but recently the size of the aphid population decreased. What will likely happen to the anteater population?

stay the same. Anteaters do not eat aphids, so the number of births and deaths in the anteater population will stay the same.

decrease. Fewer energy storage molecules will be available to the anteater population from the smaller ant population, so the anteater population will reproduce less. This will lead to fewer births than deaths in the anteater population.

decrease. A decrease in the size of any population leads to a decrease in the sizes of all other populations in an ecosystem.

increase. The smaller aphid population will leave more energy storage molecules available in the ecosystem for the anteater population, so there will be more births in the anteater population.

Tags

NGSS.MS-LS2-1

NGSS.MS-LS2-3

NGSS.MS-LS2-4

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

Media Image

The data showed that all three populations were stable. Then the grasshopper population decreased suddenly. What will likely happen to the size of the rat population as a result?

stay the same. The size of their consumer population did not change, so the number of deaths in the rat population did not change. There will be the same number of births and deaths in the rat population.

increase. The smaller grasshopper population will need fewer energy storage molecules so there will be more energy storage molecules available for the rat population to reproduce. This will lead to more births in the rat population.

decrease. A decrease in any population leads to a decrease in the sizes of all other populations in the ecosystem.

decrease. The smaller grasshopper population provides fewer energy storage molecules for the rat population, so the rat population will reproduce less. This will lead to fewer births than deaths in the rat population.

Tags

NGSS.MS-LS2-1

NGSS.MS-LS2-3

NGSS.MS-LS2-4

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

Media Image

The data showed that all three populations were stable. Then the snail population increased suddenly. What will likely happen to the size of the perch population as a result?

increase. An increase in any population within an ecosystem will lead to an increase in the sizes of all other populations in the ecosystem.

increase. The larger snail population will provide more energy storage molecules for the perch population, so they will reproduce more. This will lead to more births than deaths in the perch population.

stay the same. The size of its consumer population did not change, so the number of deaths in the perch population did not change. There will be the same number of births and deaths in the perch population.

decrease. The larger snail population will take more energy storage molecules from the ecosystem, leaving fewer available for the perch population. This will lead to more deaths than births in the perch population.

Tags

NGSS.MS-LS2-1

NGSS.MS-LS2-2

NGSS.MS-LS2-3

NGSS.MS-LS2-4

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

Media Image

In a rainforest, both spiders and frogs eat flies. The sizes of the populations have been stable for the last 10 years, but recently the size of the frog population decreased. What will likely happen to the spider population?

increase. The smaller frog population will leave more energy storage molecules for all other populations in the ecosystem, so all populations will reproduce more. This will lead to more births in the spider population.

increase. More energy storage molecules will be available to the spider population from the larger fly population, so the spider population will reproduce more. This will lead to more births than deaths in the spider population.

stay the same. Frogs and spiders do not eat each other, so the number of births and deaths in the spider population will stay the same.

decrease. A decrease in the size of one population leads to a decrease in the sizes of all other populations in an ecosystem.

Tags

NGSS.MS-LS2-1

NGSS.MS-LS2-4

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

A population of panthers lives in the southeastern United States. Over 50 years, the size of the panther population in the region increased. What best explains the increase in the size of the panther population?

The panther population is always increasing because no animal eats panthers.

Fewer panthers were born than died.

More panthers were born than died.

A lot of panthers were born and none of them died.

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

Media Image

The data showed that all three populations were stable. Then the penguin population decreased suddenly. What will likely happen to the size of the sardine population as a result?

stay the same. The size of its resource population did not change, so the amount of energy storage molecules available for the sardines did not change. There will be the same number of births and deaths in the sardine population.

decrease. A decrease in one population causes a decrease in the sizes of all other populations in the ecosystem.

increase. The smaller penguin population will leave more energy storage molecules available for the sardine population to reproduce more. This will lead to more births in the sardine population.

increase. The smaller penguin population will need fewer energy storage molecules, so they will eat fewer sardines. This will lead to fewer deaths than births in the sardine population.

Tags

NGSS.MS-LS2-1

NGSS.MS-LS2-3

NGSS.MS-LS2-4

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

A population of deer lives in Canada. Over 50 years, the size of the deer population decreased. What best explains the decrease in the size of the deer population?

A lot of deer died and no deer were born.

Fewer deer were born than died.

The deer population is always decreasing because deer are always being eaten.

More deer were born than died.

Tags

NGSS.MS-LS2-1

NGSS.MS-LS2-4

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