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SCIENCE 4 REVIEWER

 Producers- Organisms that manufacture their own food


 Decomposer - return the nutrient they get to the environment
 Herbivore is a type of consumer that feeds on plants. Cows are herbivore.
 Omnivore - A type of consumers that feed on both plants and flesh of other
animals.
 Commensalism- relationship between organisms when one benefit from the
interaction while the other is unaffected.
 Competition - A relationship between two or more species that use the same
scare resources such as food and shelter.
 Mutualism – they both benefit from one another example is an interaction
between a flower and a bee
 High birth rate of organisms - increase in the size population of a specific
ecosystem
 Photosynthesis - It is the process where planta use the energy from the sun and
carbon dioxide to produce glucose as their food.
 It is a push or pull exerted on an object - Force
 It is a force characterized as forces that are equal in size but opposite in direction. -
Balanced Force
 It is the tendency of an object to resist change in its state of motion. - Inertia
 It is a force present when two surfaces rub against each other.- Friction
 It is the kind of surface where there is a greater friction. - Rough Surface
 It is a kind of force characterized as forces that are not equal in size. - Unbalanced Force
 A mathematician, physicist, astronomer and author who introduced the three Laws of
Motion . Isaac Newton
 The 3 laws:
- LAW OF INERTIA
- LAW OF REACTION AND ACCELARATION
- LAW OF MOTION

 Balanced force is a support force exerted upon an object which is in contact with another
stable object.
 Balanced force is characterized as forces that are equal but in opposite direction.
 A greater force causes an increase in the speed of an object.
 An object with more mass requires greater force.
 When force exerted on an object is unbalanced, the motion of the object takes place in the
direction of greater force.
 Friction opposes the motion of an object.
 Rough surfaces produce greater friction than smooth surfaces.

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