Environmental Science Final study guide (tests 1-5, vocab terms)
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Tragedy of the commons
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earth resources that are unregulated and will eventually be depleted
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Ecocentric
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decisions that benefit the ecosystem
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Biocentric
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decisions that benefit ALL of life (humans, animals, trees, etc.)
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Anthropocentric
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decisions that ONLY benefit humans.
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Biocapacity
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the capacity a certain area has to generate an ongoing supply of renewable resources.
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Ecological footprint
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a measure of the amount of resources a person or country uses.
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Overshoot
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when resource consumption is greater than biocapacity.
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Environmental Justice
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fair treatment of all people, despite any ethnicity, in terms of following environmental laws, regulations, and policies.
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What happens when our ecological footprint overshoots or exceeds the biocapacity? Can sustainability be achieved?
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If all resources are used, then some people will go without resources such as shelter or food. Sustainability can be regained only if the the biocapacity is the same or more than the population. NO- sustainability can not be achieved.
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Does the present generation have an obligation to conserve resources for future generations?
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Yes. Future generations would have less or none nonrenewable resources if we don't watch or limit how much we use.
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My intuition is that the right to live is one and the same for all individuals, whatever the species.
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Biocentric
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And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth
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Anthropocentric
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The tree has a right to exist, untouched. The river has a right to flow, unpolluted, and undammed.
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Ecocentric
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Deep Ecology
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Ecocentric
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Shallow Ecology (typical of the western world and western religion)
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Anthropocentric
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The Lorax
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Ecocentric
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Attitude of respect whereby one attempts to make an effort to live one's life in a way that respects the welfare and inherent worth of all living creatures.
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Biocentric
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"When I go to the beach, I don't go in the water because there might be unpleasant animals like jellyfish or crabs there."
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Anthropocentric
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"The most important reason to protect areas where fish mature and reproduce is to insure that people will have enough fish to eat in the future."
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Anthropocentric
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"It's OK when pelican steal fish from commercial fisherman because pelicans have to eat, too."
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Biocentric
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One way to decrease the size of our ecological footprint is to...
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decrease consumption rates
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Which countries tend to have higher ecological footprints?
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Developed countries
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Which of the following statements best illustrates the tragedy of the commons? 1. a factory pollutes a river as much as the law allows 2. some levels of pollution are life threatening 3. some activities harm the environment, but others do not 4. irrigated cropland can be ruined by salinization 5. cropland can decrease biodiversity
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A factory pollutes a river as much as the law allows
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New efforts to prevent the tragedy of the commons include
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moving from a taxpayers pay approach to a users pay approach
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The Pale Blue Dot is a short essay written by
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Sagan
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Who is best known as the founder as the Sierra club and the conservationist who urged the US President at that time to start the National Park System in the United States?
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John Muir
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Which American president is famous for instituting protection of the California wilderness in the early 1900's?
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Roosevelt
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American school of philosophy exemplified by Emerson and Whitman which saw nature as a smybol of deeper spiritual truth
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Transcendentalism
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The concept of sustainability as applied to marine resources means we will manage these resources to
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Maintain viable populations of all fish species
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Which of the following BEST describes the concept of a sustainable development? 1. using only renewable resources 2. maximizing the harvest of a resource 3. meeting human needs today without endangering the needs of future generations 4. harvesting a resource at a level that depletes resources 5. preserving biodiversity (biodiversity: diversity of a species in an area)
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Meeting human needs today without endangering the needs of future generations
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A natural resource can be considered sustainable if...
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The rate of harvest does not exceed the rate at which the resource is replaced or renewed by natural processes.
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The most likely explanation for the collapse of the Rapa Nui society of Easter Island is:
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an unstable society brought on by overexploitation of natural resources.
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The capacity of an ecosystem to generate an ongoing supply of resources and to absorb its wastes is known as:
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Biocapacity
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Population
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a group of individuals of a particular species that live in the same are and have a reasonable chance of mating
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A particular type of organism; a population or group of populations whose members share certain characteristics and can freely breed with one another and produce fertile offspring.
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Species
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Carrying Capacity
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the maximum population size of a species that a given environment can sustain. It can change.
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Population Density
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the number of individuals per unit area
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Exponential Growth
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When a population increases at a fixed percentage each year.
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Logistic Growth
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when populations grows and slows as it approaches its carrying capacity.
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High population densities
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can create too much competition over resources and may lead to disease and starvation.
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Low population densities
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have more space and resources, organisms may have difficulty finding a mate.
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Population Ecology- what affects population?
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size, density, distribution (random, uniformed, clumped), age, sex ratio's, birth, death, immigration, and emigration.
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Limiting factors of population growth
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food/water, shelter, predation, disease
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Population ecology- distribution: Random
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Randomly spread out
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Population ecology- distribution: Uniformed
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Ex: penguins Certain amount of space
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Population ecology- distribution: Clumped
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Most common (ex. humans)
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Biotic
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Living or used to be living
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Abiotic
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Nonliving
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Biotic potential
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The ability to produce offspring
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High Biotic Potential
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lay thousands of eggs
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Low Biotic Potential
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long gestation period
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K-selected species
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Low biotic, long gestation period, devoted to parenting the offspring. Populations tend to stabilize at or near carrying capacity
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R-selected species
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High biotic potential, uses energy to produce as many offspring as possible. Tend to go above carrying capacity and dive back down
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Survivorship curves
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Birth and death rates- type 1,2,3
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Type 1 survivorship curve
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High death rates at older ages
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Type 2 survivorship curve
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Equal death rates at all ages
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Type 3 survivorship curve
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High death rates at young ages (R)
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Ecology
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the science of the relationships between organisms and their environments
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Density dependent factors
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factors AFFECTED BY population density
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List density dependent factors
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food, shelter, disease
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Density Independent factors
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factors that have the ability TO AFFECT population size but have nothing to do with population density
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List density independent factors
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temperature, floods, fires, landslides
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Fluctuations in populations (4 important factors in population)
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May grow, shrink, or remain stable. Birth rate, death rate, immigration(coming in), emigration(exiting) (birth rate + immigration) - (death rate+ emigration)= growth rate
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Biodiversity
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The variety of different types of life found on Earth. Number of different species in an area.
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Biodiversity- Animal distinctions
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Genes: disease resistance, varied diet, body size, climatic condition
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Biodiversity loss
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1.Habitat change and loss 2.Resource extraction (mining) 3.Invasive species, pollution 4.Overharvesting 5.Agricultural development.
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Protection of biodiversity
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U.S. endangered species act, 1975 CITIES, 1992 biodiversity treaty
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Which of these graphs shows the Kaibab deer population between 1900 and 1923? 1. Straight line slanting upward, showing steady increase over time 2. J-shaped upward curve with very rapid increase 3. A "sine wave" curving up, down, up, down 4. Rapidly decreasing slope from left to right 5. S-shaped curve that shows smooth, rapid increase then levels off
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J-shaped upward curve with a very rapid increase
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The removal of livestock and predators, and the cessation of hunting in 1907...
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Changed the environmental resistance, increasing K for the Kaibab deer.
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What is going to happen to the area resources immediately after 1923?
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The deer herd continues to increase, so the resources will continue to damaged.
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The initial population of the Kaibab deer in 1906 was about 4,000. In an area of about 800,000 acres, this works out to an average density of one deer per 200 acres. What is the density in 1923?
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One deer per 8 acres
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Mule deer such as the Kaibab population can live 10-25 years. In 1920, an age structure diagram of the Kaibab deer population would...
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Look like a wide triangle, very wide at the bottom and narrow at the top.
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A Type 1 survivorship curve is typical of
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Large mammals such as gorillas
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Groups of organisms with low biotic potention, such as gray whales, that produce at most one offspring ever other year, are said to be...
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K- selected
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The carrying capacity is the
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Maximum population size that a given environment can sustain
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A population that is growing exponentially in the absence of limiting factors can be illustrated by...
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J-shaped curve
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High population density can...
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Increase the incidence of disease transmission
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A biologist reported that a sample of ocean water had 5 million diatoms of the species Coscinodiscus centralis per cubic meter. What was the biologist measuring?
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Population density
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The innate (automatic) reproductive capacity of a species is its...
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Biotic potential
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What ALWAYS HAPPENS when a population exceeds its carrying capacity?
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The population growth rate decreases
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Populations that follow the J curve often exhibit a "population crash" in which the population is reduced to a fraction of its original size. A likely explanation for this is that...
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The population may destroy some aspect of the carrying capacity and thus reduce it for future generations.
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The combination of all of the abiotic and biotic factors that may limit population increase is called...
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Environmental resistance
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Under the optimal conditions, the fruit fly (Drosphila) is capable of producing a new generation every two weeks. This ability is referred to as the ________ of the species
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Biotic potential
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What can be said about the growth of a population whose age structure graph approximates a triangle with a large base?
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It is increasing rapidly
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A species whose member grow and reproduce quickly and then die off makes up a _______ species and would have a ________ survivorship curve.
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R-selected, Type 3
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Density-dependent factors include factors such as_______, while density-independent factors include factors such as______.
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Competition, storms
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Which of the following is NOT a limiting factor in the environment?
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Environmental Resistance
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Which of the following would most likely increase competition between members of a population?
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An increase in population density
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By altering habitats, human activity has resulted in the decline of many wildlife species by acting as a...
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Density independent factor
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What is part of an ecosystem that is not part of a community?
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Abiotic factors
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Habitat
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The specific environment where an organism lives
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A species use of resources and its functional role in the community. is within or inside a habitat
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Niche
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Competitive Exclusion
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One organism eliminating another when competing for a specific limited resource
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Specialist
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Very specific niche requirements
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Generalists
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Have broad tolerances and are able to use a wide variety of habitats or resources
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Predation
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When one organism kills or eats another
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Mutualism
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Partnership between two species where both benefit(+/+)
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Commensalism
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One species benefits and the other is neither benefitted nor harmed (+/0)
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Parasitism
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When one organism lives in or on another and feeds on it without immediately killing it
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Can 2 species occupy the same niche?
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No, a specific niche can only hold one species because of the limited amount of resources
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Community
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Multiple interacting species that live in the same area
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Ecosystem
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Community+Abiotic factors
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The cumulative total of living things on earth
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Biosphere
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Population Ecology
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Studies how individuals in one species interact with one another
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Organismal Level
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Studies the relationships between organisms and their environment
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Community Ecology
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Studies interactions among species
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Reveals the patterns by studying living and nonliving components of the environment
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Ecosystem Ecology
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Competition
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When 2 organisms attempt to use the same resources
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Intraspecies or intraspecific competition
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Same species
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Interspecies or interspecific competition
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2 or more different species
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Succession
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Predictable series of changes within the species of an ecosystem .
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Primary Succession
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Community is built from scratch, on rock surfaces.
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Secondary Succession
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New community forms on a previously existing ecosystem (abandoned farmland, areas destroyed by hurricanes, logging, fires, dried lakes)
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Primary consumers are called herbivores. True or false?
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True
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All ecosystems use sunlights as their primary source of energy. True or false?
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False
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Despite the diversity of ecosystems in the world, all have similar trophic levels. True or false?
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True
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Occasional disturbances from natural forces such as fire are good for many ecosystems. True or false?
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True
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Omnivores consume both producers and consumers True or false?
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True
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Large organisms like eagles, lions, or salmon are primary consumers of energy while small organisms like mice, rabbit, ad sparrows are secondary consumers. True or false?
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False
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Producers are always autotrophic True or false?
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True
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Consumers are always heterotrophic True or false?
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True
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A trophic cascade can be caused by the removal of a keystone species. True or false?
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True
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Hydrothermal vent communities use heat from the vent for their primary energy source. True or false?
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False
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Abandoned farmland usually reverts back to forest. This process of forest regeneration is called...
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Secondary succession
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Which of the following represents a typical example of ecological succession in temperate deciduous forest?
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Bare soil, weeds, grasses, shrubs, conifers, deciduous trees.
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A species that has an essential role in maintaining ecosystem structure is called...
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Keystone Species
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Approximately what percentage of energy will be passed on to the next trophic level in a typical food chain?
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10%
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In a food chain, the trophic level that has the greatest biomass is the...
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The producer
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The chemical process through which glucose and other organic molecules are broken down to release energy is known as ...
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Cellular respiration
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In a food web that consists of grass, mice, deer, and wolves, which species is likely to have the greatest biomass?
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Grass
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The process that bacteria in the hydrothermal vents perform that is not performed by other organisms in most ecosystem is...
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Chemosynthesis
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Which of the following statements describes the movement of energy in food chains?
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Energy decreases at higher trophic levels
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The FIRST trophic level refers to...
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All producers
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Succession is made possible because...
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Immigrating species make the environment less suitable for species already there.
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Where might an ecologist be able to study primary succession?
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A new island formed by a volcanic eruption, gravel-filled valley that had been covered by a glacier until recently, and a huge boulder or rock layer on top of mountains.
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Different species can share the same habitat, but competition among them is reduced if they...
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Occupy different niches.
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The relationship between a flower and the insect that feeds on its nectar is an example of...
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Mutualism. BC flower provides insect food and the insect pollinates the flower.
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A species may become invasive if______ are absent from the environment.
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Limiting factors
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Which of the following is not an example of mutualism? Termites and protozoans Humans and intestinal bacteria Clown fish and sea anemone Aphid and plant
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Aphid and plant
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When two different species compete for the same limited resource it is called...
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Interspecific competition
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In Madagascar, several species of lemur eat bamboo, but each species specializes in one part of the bamboo- one species eats mature bamboo stalks, one species eats bamboo shoots, and one species eats leaves. This is an example of...
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Resource partitioning
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It is very important to keep______ off of Mount Rushmore, otherwise they may begin the process of______
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lichens, primary succession
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If primary consumers contain 700 kilocalories of energy, the tertiary consumer will contain...
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7 kilocalories
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How much water makes up the earth?
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75%
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How much of the Earth's water is salt water?
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97.5%
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How much of the Earth's water is fresh water?
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2.5%
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How much water is groundwater?
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20%
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How much of the water are ice caps and glaciers?
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79%
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How much water is surface water?
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1%
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Watershed
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Area that drains into a river, including all tributaries
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Aquifer
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An underground layer of water- bearing permeable rock from which groundwater can be extracted with a well
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Confined Aquifer
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Water is trapped between layers
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Unconfined Aquifer
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No top layer, less pressure and easily recharged
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Water table
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The level below where the groundwater is saturated with water.
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Recharge Zone
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The area where water enters the aquifer
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List the four features of a Karsts
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Sinkholes, losing steam, springs, cave
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Solution to water shortages:
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Desalination: taking salt out of salt water Reduce agricultural demand Xeriscaping- replacing lawns of grass with sand and rocks (Arizona) Use native plants when landscaping
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Point pollution
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Pollution that is coming from a specific source. Oil spills
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Non point pollution
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Pollution that comes from everywhere and cannot be pinpointed. Runoff carried by rivers
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Eutrophication
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The enrichment of an ecosystem with chemical nutrients. Blocks light from plants on the bottom of the ocean.
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What causes eutrophication?
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Inputs of nitrogen and phosphorus
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What type of water does nitrogen affect?
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Marine water
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What type of water does phosphorus affect?
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Freshwater
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What does eutrophication cause?
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Excessive plant growth (algal bloom). Plants die and decompose, decomposition uses up oxygen, fish die.
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Heat pollution (thermal pollution)
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Takes oxygen out of water. Power plants pump in river water, use it to cool their hot machines, pump the hot water back out to the river.
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Trophic cascade
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Happens when one trophic level goes up or down. When one changes in one level then it affects the other levels.
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Are all primary consumers herbivores?
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Yes
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Are all introduced species also invasive?
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No unless they increase competition
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Heterotrophic
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Get energy from other things. Consumers
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Autotrophic
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Producers. Make own food
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A hole dug into an aquifer to reach groundwater is called a...
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Well
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Which of the following offers a way to control nonpoint pollution? 1. restricting the types of trash buried in a city's only landfill 2. refusing to allow a new factory to dump waste into a river 3. upgrading the requirements for underground storage tanks 4. reducing the amount of chemicals applied to your own lawn
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Reducing the amount of chemicals applied to your own lawn
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The best way to reduce groundwater pollution is to....
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Prevent it from happening because it takes longer for groundwater pollution to break down.
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All of the land area that supplies water to a particular river system in a(n)
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Watershed
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Sometimes, the ground water naturally rises to the surface creating 1. aquifers 2. wells 3. drainage basins 4. springs
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Springs
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To help regulate river flow, prevent flooding, and to build a stable supply of water, engineers build... 1. aquifers 2. water tables 3. dams 4. wells
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Dams
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Which of the following is an example of nonpoint-source pollution? 1. a boat leaking motor oil 2. a pipe releasing hot water 3. rain washing salt off the roads 4. a container leaking chemicals
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Rain washing salt off the roads
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Harmful algal blooms are a result of what type of pollution?
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Nutrient
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When neighborhood residents noticed a large number of dead fish in a local creek, they traced the problem to a nearby gas station. It turned out that the tank of antifreeze had developed a leak. This is an example of...
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point pollution
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Which of the following causes most of the pollution of oceans? 1. sewage sludge dumped directly into the ocean 2. oil spills from tankers and offshore oil rigs (like Exxon Valdez or BP oil spill) 3. ship dumping garbage into the ocean 4. pollutants from and based activities that area carried to the ocean by rivers
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Pollutants from land based activities that are carried to the ocean by rivers
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Some communities have banned detergents containing high levels of phosphates (substances containing phosphorus) because...
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Excessive phosphates in rivers and lakes begin the process of cultural eutrophication
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Which of the following might occur as a result of plastic trash accumulating in the ocean? 1. turtles mistake clear plastic bags for jellyfish, ingest them, and die of intestinal blockage 2. sea birds are strangled by plastic six-pack rings 3. sea mammals, such as seals and otters, become tangled in fishing line and drown 4. all the above
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All of the above
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Which of the following is the most likely source of point pollution? 1. animal wastes that wash away from parks and lawns 2. leakage of radioactive waste from a landfill 3. runoff of fertilizer applied lawns 4. runoff of oil from mega mall parking lots
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Leakage of radioactive waste from a landfill
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A common feature of thermal pollution and artificial eutrophication is that they both...
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Decrease the amount of oxygen dissolved in water
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What is the most practical solution to fresh water shortages?
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Water conservation and preservation
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A fecal coliform test.... 1. could be used to test whether a sewage treatment plant is leaking 2. test for the presence of a bacterium called Escherichia coli (E. coli) 3. would reveal a contamination of a water supply by animal feces 4. all of the above
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All of the above
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Which of the following is most likely to cause conflict between two countries that share a river? 1. the upstream country drills a large number of new water wells 2. the upstream country builds a new series of dams 3. the downstream country uses an increasing amount of water irrigation 4. new industries dump pollutants into the river near the delta (or estuary) where the river empties into the ocean.
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The upstream country builds a new series of dams
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Most of the Earth's fresh water is
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Frozen at the north and south poles
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Which of the following offers a way to control nonpoint pollution 1. collecting livestock wastes in storage pits for treatment 2. reducing fertilizer use at home 3. checking automobiles regularly oil leaks 4. eating less meat 5. all of the above
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All of the above
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Thermal pollution is caused by____and is classified as _____pollution 1. nutrients, nonpoint 2. nutrients, point 3. heat, nonpoint 4. heat, point
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heat, point
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Dam:Reservoir::
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Wreck:traffic jam
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Artificial or cultural eutrophication: fertilizer::
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thermal pollution:heat
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Watershed: river::
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recharge zone: aquifer
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Nonpoint pollution:multiple sources::
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point pollution: single source
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Desalination: salt::
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Decontamination: pollution
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List the 4 primary features of a karst landscape
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losing stream, springs, sinkholes, caves
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What is the land around the river called?
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Floodplain
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List the fossil fuels
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coal, oil, natural gas
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Fossil fuels
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Nonrenewable resources, takes millions of years to form, releases carbon dioxide when burned
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Coal
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Nonrenewable, formed from dead plants
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Oil
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Nonrenewable, formed from dead ocean organisms
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Natural gas
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Nonrenewable, formed from dead ocean organisms
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Nuclear Power
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Nonrenewable, energy that exists in the nucleus of an atom. Radioactive waste instead of co2
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When is energy released?
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When bonds that hold protons and neutrons together are broken.
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Nuclear fusion
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What happens on the sun, atomic nuclei are combined. Two or more lighter nuclei combine to form a heavier nucleus
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Nuclear fission
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Uranium atoms are split using a neutron bullet. A heavy nucleus splits to form 2 or more lighter nuclei.
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Whats the difference between fission and fusion?
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fission: heavy nucleus splits to form 2 or more lighter nuclei fusion: 2 or more lighter nuclei combine to form a heavier nucleus
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Lake Karachay
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Most polluted spot on the planet, contaminated from nuclear waste
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List the renewable energy sources
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Solar- photovoltaic cells= electricity AND solar collectors= heat/hot water Wind Geothermal- using heat from earth. From geysers, hot springs, volcanoes, etc Biomass Hydroelectric Wave/tidal energy
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List the nonrenewable energy sources
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Oil Gas Coal copper, aluminum, and other metals
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How many rivers have dams?
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98%
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How many rivers are free flowing?
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2%
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Pros and cons of dams:
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PROS: Releases no carbon dioxide, produces electricity CONS: Disrupts ecosystems, destroys habitats
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Solar Energy
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Uses photovoltaic(pv) cells on solar panels, turns sunlight into electricity. Solar collectors turns sunlight into heat
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Wind power
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Wind causes blades on windmills to rotate Shaft turns generator to produce electrical energy Transformer converts it to high voltage Electricity is transferred to power via grid
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Biomass
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Natural decomposing things crops, sewage, feces, forestry Biomass is burned which creates steam. The steam is used to turn turbine and power generator
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Geothermal
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Energy using hot rocks below the Earth's surface
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Ecological region at the lowest level of a body of water
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Benthic
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When the concentration of a substance in an organism exceeds the background concentration of the substance in the organism's diet
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Biomagnification
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Approach to innovation that seeks sustainable solutions to human challenges by emulating nature's patterns and strategies
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Biomimicry
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Process of converting glucose to carbon dioxide and water
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Cellular respiration
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Biological conversion of carbon molecules and nutrients into organic matter
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Chemosynthesis
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Expresses a biological community of plants, animals, and fungi
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Climax Community
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The change of a biological object triggered by the change of a related object
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Coevolution
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Ethic of resource use, allocation, exploitation, and protection
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Conservation ethic
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A US agency that has a goal to protect human and environmental health
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EPA
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The sum of the environmental factors that restrict the biotic potential of an organism
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Environmental Resistance
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The process of a species becoming extinct
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Extinction
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A chemical or a natural substance added to soil or land to increase fertility
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Fertilizer
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A fissure in a plant that geothermally heats water, commonly found near volcanoes
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Hydrothermal vent
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Deficiency of oxygen
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Hypoxia
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Organisms that spread uncontrollably and intrude other places
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Invasive
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An organism that plays a unique and vital role in their ecosystem
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Keystone Species
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A simple slow-growing plant that typically forms on rocks. First thing that starts primary succession. Made of algae and fungi
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Lichen
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"Survival of the fittest" where species better adapted to their environment survive and others die with their traits.
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Natural selections
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Heterotrophic plankton; organisms that drift in fresh bodies of water
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Zooplankton
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A process where plants turn light into energy
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Photosynthesis
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Heterotrophic plankton; plays a key role in fresh bodies of water
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Phytoplankton
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Species that are first to colonize damaged ecosystems beginning a chain of ecological succession
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Pioneer Species
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The commitment to try and preserve the environment
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Preservation Ethic
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Organisms that eat autotrophs; all primary consumers are herbivores
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Primary Consumer
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Biological and ecological building of plant life in a certain area (lichens)
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Primary Succession
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A series of community changes that take place in a previously colonized, but now damaged habitat
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Secondary Succession
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Organisms that eat heterotrophs
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Secondary Consumer
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Mud or a mixture of liquid and solid components
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Sludge
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Maintaining or supporting something at a minimum level
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Subsistence
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The capacity to endure something; endurance of systems and processes
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Sustainability
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Another word for urbanization; the migration of people from very populated to low population places
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Urban Sprawl
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A_____ produces electricity and a _______ uses electricity
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Generator, motor
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Electricity generators are very large quantities of________ spinning around inside very large_________ at very high speeds.
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Copper wire, magnets
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When a turbine spins it causes the_____ to be set into motion which generates electricity.
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Generator
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In a coal burning power plant, the heat from burning coal is used to...
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Cause water to evaporate into steam
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How does coal harm the environment? 1.destructive mining 2.releases greenhouse gases 3.contributes to acid rain 4. all the above
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All
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Where does the energy in coal come from?
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Carbon compounds stored in dead trees, photosynthesis, the sun
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Fossil fuels are______ energy source
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Nonrenewable
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Electricity is
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The flow of electrons
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Fossil fuels are formed by
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The partial decay and compression of dead organisms over millions of years
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An environmental impact common to all fossil fuels is
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They release carbon dioxide when burned
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Which of the following is not a fossil fuel? 1. Coal 2. Oil 3. Gasoline 4. Natural Gas
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Gasoline
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What is the most environmentally damaging type of coal mining?
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Mountain-top removal
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What's the order of how coal produces electricity?
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1. Burn coal 2. High pressure 3. Spins Turbine 4. Generator is set in motion
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All electric generators work by.... 1. converting oil into electricity 2. turning turbines in a dam 3. moving an electrical conductor, such as a metal wire, through a magnet field 4. rubbing copper against a substance that does not conduct electricity
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Moving an electrical conductor, such as a metal wire, through a magnetic field
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Which of the following fuels does NOT release carbon dioxide when it is used to produce electricity? 1. uranium 2 natural gas 3. biomass 4. coal
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Uranium
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Which of the following accurately describes the use of dams to generate electricity? 1. dams are expensive to build and cannot be built everywhere 2. electricity can be generated without producing waste products 3. dams create reservoirs that provide a water supply for cities and farms, but they also destroy ecosystems 4. all statements are correct
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All statements are correct
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Which of the following does NOT correctly match the energy source with its advantages? Which is false? 1. coal can be easily obtained with minimal environmental damage 2. solar energy cannot be used up and does not pollute the atmosphere 3. nuclear energy does not release any air pollution
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Coal can be easily obtained with minimal environmental damage
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The action of moving a conductive material through a magnetic field...
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Generates an electric current
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Which process is the current method by which nuclear power plants obtain their initial energy? 1. release of energy from carbon 2. fission 3. fusion 4. petroleum
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Fission
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Great amounts of energy are released by...
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The process of nuclear fission Small amounts of uranium-235 The breaking of subatomic bonds (the splitting of nucleus)
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One disadvantage of hydroelectric dams is that they...
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Disrupt previously existing river ecosystems
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What is the main problem that prevents geothermal energy from being widely used?
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Geothermal energy is only available in certain areas
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Most power plants produce electricity by...
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Releasing the energy stored in carbon compounds
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Unlike fossil fuels, biomass...
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Is considered a renewable resource
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The major environmental impact common to all fossil fuels is that they...
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Produce carbon dioxide
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Fossil fuels are a_______ energy source
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Nonrenewable
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The Alaska pipeline was built to:
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Help increase production of domestic (coming from U.S.) crude oil.
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Fossil fuels are formed by...
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the decay of dead organisms over millions of year
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Which of the following is a correct comparison of the mining impact of the coal and nuclear industries? 1. uranium mining causes a much larger impact 2. mining is not part of the environmental impact of a fuel 3. mining impacts are both small ad compared to the extraction of other fuels 4. they both involve about the same amount of mining 5. coal mining results in a much larger impact
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Coal mining results in a much larger impact
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Using nuclear energy to create electricity 1. is always safe 2. is never safe 3. involves splitting an atom 4. keeps matter unchanged on the atomic level 5. involves a great deal of air pollution
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Involves splitting an atom
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Producing more electricity through nuclear power plants instead of fossil fuel-fired plants would:
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Help to moderate the greenhouse effect by reducing the amount of carbon dioxide in the air
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In 1987, Congress selected this site for long-term disposal of high level radioactive waste; but after much debate congress decided to not go through with the project.
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Yucca Mountain, Nevada
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The world's worst nuclear power plant disaster to date occurred at...
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Chernobyl, Ukraine
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With 75,000 dams in the United States, only____ percent of rivers are still free-flowing.
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2%
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Home production of electricity from solar energy requires the use of:
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Photovoltaic cells (PV cells)
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The burning of natural gas releases no carbon dioxide into the air. True or false?
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False
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The operation of a nuclear power does not contribute to global warming. True or false?
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True
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Solar energy is a renewable energy source. True or false?
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True
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The burning of fossil fuels releases carbon dioxide into the air. True or false?
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True
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Wood, solid waste, or crops used to produce energy
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Biomass
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The breaking of the bonds holding together subatomic particles
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Nuclear fission
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The energy that exists within the nucleus of an atom
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Nuclear or subatomic energy
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Consists of a semiconductor material (phosphorous-silicon) that releases electrons when energized
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Photovoltaic
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Used to heat water
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Sollar collectors
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Blowing up the earth to get to coal...sickening/corporate greed
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Mountaintop removal
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Energy generated by falling water
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Hydroelectricity
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The flow of electrons
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Electricity
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A simple turbine
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Windmill