Test your knowledge of hedgerows and a small-scale UK ecosystem with this 15-question GCSE quiz.
If you haven't already done it, work through the hedgerows and small-scale UK ecosystem web enquiry on the PowerPoint. Or do it again to help fill any gaps in what you know!
Rank | Name | Score |
---|---|---|
1st | OLS | 30 |
2nd | CME | 30 |
3rd | Big | 30 |
4th | Dex | 30 |
5th | FIN | 30 |
6th | FIN | 30 |
7th | FIN | 30 |
8th | FIN | 30 |
9th | A.D | 30 |
10th | SJN | 30 |
1,800
18,000
180,000
1,800,000
Enough to stretch twice around the world
Enough to stretch from Cardiff to Cairo
As long as the Great Wall of China
The same length as the M4 motorway
0–5%
25–30%
50%
80–90%
Tractors became smaller but more powerful
Hedgerows didn’t have any gateways for machinery to get into fields
Farmers didn’t keep livestock (e.g. sheep) anymore; they only grew crops
Larger fields meant more crops could be grown
Clearing out birds’ nests
Preventing erosion
Learning the skill of hedge laying
Never cutting hedges
11th century
14th century
18th century
20th century
Golden eagles
Dragonflies
Bats
Puffins
Dormice
Water voles
Brown rats
Red deer
2,500
250
25
2.5
Reducing soil nutrients
As biofuel
Quick to put up whenever animals need to be kept apart
Reducing soil erosion
January to November
March to April
March to August
November to January
Bamboo and bracken
Oak and ash
Hawthorn and blackthorn
Nettles and field maples
The natural home of an animal or plant
A community of living things and their physical environment
The flow of nutrients through an ecosystem
The different ways that ecosystems give humans something we need
Risk of chemical spills
Risk of fire
Risk of plant allergies
Risk of injury from incorrect lifting techniques
Wales
England
Scotland
Northern Ireland
You scored this time. The more correct answers you give, and the fewer incorrect answers you guess, the better your score.