Biosphere
Across
- 4. – An animal that eats only other animals.
- 6. – A cold biome near the North and South Poles with ice and snow most of the year.
- 7. – The natural process by which ecosystems change and develop over time.
- 8. – The living parts of an ecosystem, like plants, animals, and bacteria.
- 10. – A cold, treeless biome with frozen soil called permafrost.
- 13. – A large region with specific types of plants, animals, and climate.
- 16. – A group of similar organisms that can breed and produce offspring.
- 18. – A cooler rainforest with lots of rain, found in coastal areas.
- 20. – The nonliving parts of an ecosystem, like sunlight, water, and temperature.
- 21. – The maximum number of organisms an environment can support.
- 22. – An animal that eats both plants and animals.
- 23. – An organism that gets its food by eating other living things.
- 25. – All the living and nonliving things that interact in a particular area.
- 27. – A series of steps showing who eats who in an ecosystem.
Down
- 1. – An organism that makes its own food, usually using sunlight (like plants).
- 2. – An organism that breaks down dead things and returns nutrients to the soil.
- 3. – A non-native species that spreads quickly and harms the environment.
- 5. – The natural home or environment where an organism lives.
- 9. – A warm, wet biome with the most biodiversity, found near the equator.
- 11. – A dry biome that gets very little rain.
- 12. – The role or job an organism has in its environment, including what it eats and how it interacts with others.
- 14. – An animal that eats only plants.
- 15. – A biome where grasses are the main plants, with few trees.
- 17. – A biome with trees that lose their leaves in the fall.
- 19. – The variety of life in a particular area or ecosystem.
- 24. – A system of connected food chains showing how energy moves through an ecosystem.
- 26. – A cold forest biome with mostly evergreen trees.