Midterm :) Flashcards

1
Q

Interdisciplinary study that uses information and ideas from the physical sciences, with those fromt he social sciences and humanities to learn how nature works, how we interact with the environment, and how we can to help deal with environmental problems

A

Environmental Science

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2
Q

Biological science that studies the relationships between living organisms and their environment; study of the structure and functions of nature

A

Ecology

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3
Q

Natural resources and natural servies that keep us and other species alive and support our economies

A

Natural Capital

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4
Q

Materials such as air, water, and soil and energy in nature that are essential or useful to humans

A

Natural Resources

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5
Q

Proceses of nature, such as purification of air and water and pest control, which support life and human economies

A

Natural Servies

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6
Q

Social movement dedicated to protecting the earth’s life support systems for us and other species

A

Environmentalism

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7
Q

One or more communities of different species interacting with one another and with the chemical and physical factors making up their nonliving environment

A

Ecosystems

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8
Q

Ability of earth’s various systems, including human cultural systems and economies, to survive and adapt to changing environmental conditions indefinitely

A

Sustainability

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9
Q

Growth in which some quantity, such as population size or economic output, increases at a constant rate per unit of time. An example is the growth sequence 2,4,8,16,32… which increases at 100% each interval. When the increase in quantity over time is plotted, this type of growth yields a curve shaped like the letter J

A

Exponential Growth

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10
Q

Anything obtained from the environment to meet human needs and wants. It can also be applied to other species

A

Resources

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11
Q

Resources that can be replenished rapidly(hours to decades)/ resource that exists in a fixed amount and has the potential for renewal over hundreds of millions to billions of years/ essentially inexhaustible resource on a human time scale

A

Renewable/ Nonrenewable/ Perpetual Resources

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12
Q

Highest rate at which a potentially renewable resource can be used indefinitely without reducing its available supply

A

Sustainable Yield

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13
Q

Amount of biologically productive land and water needed to supply a population with the renewable resources it uses and to absorb or dispose of the wastes from such resource use. It is a measure of the average environmental impact of populations in different countries and areas

A

Ecological Footprint

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14
Q

Depletion or degradation of a potentially renewable resource to which people have free and unmanaged access. An example is the depletion of commercially desirable fish species in the open ocean beyond areas controlled by coastal countries

A

Tragedy of the Commons

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15
Q

Depletion or destruction of a potentially renewable resource such as soil, grassland, forest, or wildlife that is used faster than it is naturally replenished. If such use continues, the resource becomes nonrenewable or nonexistent

A

Environmental Degradation

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16
Q

Device, process, or strategy used to prevent a potential pollutant from forming or entering the environment or to sharply reduce the amount entering the environment

A

Pollution Prevention

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17
Q

Device or process that removes or reduces the level of a pollutant after it has been produced or has entered the environment. Examples include automobile admission control devices and sewage treatment plant

A

Pollution Cleanup

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18
Q

Country that is highly industrialized and has a high per capita GDP

A

Developed Country

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19
Q

Country that has low to moderate industrialization and low to moderate per capita GDP

A

Developing Country

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20
Q

Maximum population of a particular species that a given habitat can support over a given period

A

Carrying Capacity

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21
Q

Compounds containing carbon atoms combined with each other and with atoms of one or more other elements such as hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, phosphorus, chlorine, and fluorine

A

Organic Compounds

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22
Q

Whenever energy is converted from one form to another in a physical or chemical change, no energy is created or destroyed, but energy can be changed from one form to another; you cannot get more energy out of something than you put in; in terms of energy quantity, you cannot get something for nothing. This law does not apply to nuclear changes, in which large amounts of energy can be produced from small amounts of matter

A

First Law of Thermodynamics

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23
Q

Whenever energy is converted from one form to another in a physical or chemical change, we end up with lower-quality or less usable energy than we started with. In any conversion of heat energy to useful work, come of the initial energy input is always degraded to lower-quality, more dispersed, less useful energy- usually low-temperature heat that flows into the environment; you cannot bread even in terms of energy quality

A

Second Law of Thermodynamics

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24
Q

Energy stored in an object because of its position or the position of its parts

A

Potential Energy

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25
Q

Energy that matter has because of its mass and speed, or velocity

A

Kinetic Energy

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26
Q

Anything that has mass and takes up space. On the earth, where gravity is present, we weigh an object to determine its mass

A

Matter

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27
Q

Matter that is concentrated and contains a high concentration of a useful resource

A

High-Quality Matter

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28
Q

Matter that is dilute or dispersed or contains a low concentration of a useful resource

A

Low-Quality Matter

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29
Q

In any physical or chemical change, matter is neither created nor destroyed but merely changed from one form to another; in physical and chemical changes, existing atoms are rearranged into different spatial patterns or different combinations

A

Law of Conservation of Matter

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30
Q

Organism that uses solar energy or chemical energy to manufacture the organic compounds it needs as nutrients from simple inorganic compounds obtained from its environment

A

Producer

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31
Q

Organism that feeds on some or all parts of plants or on other producers

A

Primary Consumer

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32
Q

Organism that feeds only on primary consumers

A

Secondary Consumer

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33
Q

Animals that feed on animal-eating animals. They feed at high trophic levels in food chains and webs.

A

Tertiary Consumer

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34
Q

Organism that digests parts of dead organisms, and cast-off fragments and wastes of living organisms by breaking down the complex organic molecules in those materials into simpler inorganic compounds and then absorbing the soluble nutrients. Producers return most of these chemicals to the soil and water for reuse

A

Decomposers

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35
Q

Complex process that takes place in cells of green plants. Radiant energy from the sun is used to combine carbon dioxide and water to produce oxygen, carbohydrates, and other nutrient molecules

A

Photosynthesis

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36
Q

Process in which certain organisms extract inorganic compounds from their environment and convert them into organic nutrient compounds without the presence of sunlight

A

Chemosynthesis

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37
Q

natural processes that recycle nutrients in various chemical forms from the nonliving environment to living organisms and then back to the nonliving environment.

A

biogeochemical cycles

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38
Q

biogeochemical cycles

A

carbon; oxygen; nitrogen; phosphorus; sulfur; and hydrologic

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39
Q

Nonliving

A

abiotic

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40
Q

living

A

biotic

41
Q

series of organisms in which each eats or decomposes the preceding one

A

food chain

42
Q

complex network of many interconnected food chains and feeding relationships

A

food web

43
Q

process by which humans select one or more desirable genetic traits in the population of a plant or animal species and then use selective breeding to produce populations containing many individuals with the desired traits

A

artificial selection

44
Q

GMO; organism whose genetic makeup has been altered by genetic engineering

A

transgenic organism

45
Q

species whose decline serves as early warnings that a community or ecosystem is being degraded

A

indicator species

46
Q

species that play roles affecting many other organisms in an ecosystem

A

keystone species

47
Q

species that plays a major role in shaping a community by creating and enhancing a habitat that benefits other species

A

foundation species

48
Q

species that normally live and thrive in a particular ecosystem

A

native species

49
Q

species that migrate into an ecosystem or are deliberately or accidentally introduced into an ecosystem by humans

A

nonnative species

50
Q

species with a narrow ecological niche; they may be able to live in only one type of habitat, tolerate only a narrow range of climatic and other environmental conditions, or use only one type or a few types of food

A

specialist species

51
Q

species with a broad ecological niche; they can live in many different places, eat a variety of foods, and tolerate a wide range of environmental conditions

A

generalist species

52
Q

variety of species, measured by the number of different species contained in a community

A

species richness

53
Q

total way of life or tole of a species in an ecosystem; it includes all physical, chemical, and biological conditions that a species needs to live and reproduce in an ecosystem

A

niche

54
Q

place or type of place where an organism or population of organisms lives

A

habitat

55
Q

two or more individual organisms of a single species (intraspecific) or two or more individuals of different species (interspecific) attempting to use the same scarce resources in the same ecosystem

A

competition

56
Q

interaction in which an organism of one species captures and feeds on some or all parts of organism of another species

A

predation

57
Q

an interaction between organisms of different species in which one type of organism benefits and the other type is neither helped nor harmed to any great degree

A

commensalism

58
Q

type of species interaction in which both participating species generally benefit

A

mutualism

59
Q

interaction between species in which one organism preys on another organism by living on or in the host

A

parasitism

60
Q

pattern in which exponential population growth occurs when the population is small, and population growth decreases steadily with time as the population approaches the carrying capacity

A

logistic growth

61
Q

maximum rate at which the population of a given species can increase when there are no limits on its rate of growth

A

biotic potential

62
Q

all of the limiting factors that act together to limit the growth of a population

A

environmental resistance

63
Q

evolution in which two or more species interact and exert selective pressures on each other that can lead each species to undergo adaptations

A

coevolution

64
Q

ecological succession in an area without soil or bottom sediments

A

primary succession

65
Q

ecological succession in an area in which natural vegetation has been removed or destroyed but the soil or bottom sediment has not been destroyed

A

secondary succession

66
Q

single factor that limits the growth, abundance, or distribution of the population of a species in an ecosystem

A

limiting factor

67
Q

increase or decrease in the size of population; equal to (births+immigrations)-(deaths+emigrations)

A

population change

68
Q

annual number of live births per 1000 people in the population of a geographic area at the midpoint of a given year

A

crude birth rate

69
Q

all organisms that are the same number of energy transfers away from the original source of energy that enters an ecosystem

A

trophic level

70
Q

organic matter produced by plants and other photosynthetic producers; total dry weight of all living organisms that can be supported at each trophic level in a food chain or web; dry weigh of all organic matter in plants and animals in an ecosystem; plant materials and animal wastes used as fuel

A

biomass

71
Q

range of chemical and physical conditions that must be maintained for populations of a particular species to stay alive and grow, develop, and function normally

A

range of tolerance

72
Q

point at which an environmental problem reaches a threshold level, which causes an often irreversible shift in the behavior of a natural system

A

ecological tipping point

73
Q

warming of the earth’s lower atmosphere (troposphere) because of increases in the concentrations of one or more greenhouse gases; it can result in climate change that can last for decades to thousands of years

A

global warming

74
Q

change in the genetic makeup of a population of a species in successive generations; if continued long enough, it can lead to the formation of a new species

A

evolution

75
Q

process by which a particular beneficial gene is reproduced in succeeding generations more than other genes; the result of this is a population that contains a greater proportion of organisms better adapted to certain environmental conditions

A

natural selection/ survival of the fittest

76
Q

phenomenon in which individuals with adaptive genetic traits produce more living offspring than do individuals without such traits

A

differential reproduction

77
Q

separation of populations of a species into different areas for long periods of time

A

geographic isolation

78
Q

random change in DNA molecules making up genes that can alter anatomy, physiology, or behavior in an offspring

A

mutation

79
Q

normal extinction of various species as a result of changes in loval environmental conditions

A

background extinction rate

80
Q

catastrophic, widespread, often global event in which major groups of species are wiped out over a short time compared with normal extinctions

A

mass extinction rate

81
Q

long-term geographic separation of members of a particular sexually reproducing species

A

reproductive isolation

82
Q

species that is found in only one area; such species are especially vulnerable to extinction

A

endemic species

83
Q

insertion of an alien gene into an organism to give it a beneficial genetic trait

A

genetic engineering

84
Q

three principles of sustainability

A
  • reliance on solar energy
  • biodiversity
  • chemical cycling (nutrient cycling)
85
Q

key environmental problems

A
  • population growth
  • wasteful and unsustainable resource use
  • poverty
  • exclusion of environmental costs of resource use from the market prices of goods and services
86
Q

environmental impact of a population depends upon…

A
  • ecological footprint

- IPAT: Impact= Population x Affluence x Technology

87
Q

scientific limitations

A
  1. cannot prove or disprove anything absolutely, there is always some degree of uncertainty
  2. scientists are human and not totally free form bias
  3. many systems in the natural world involve a huge number of variables with complex interactions
  4. the use of statistical tools to estimate numbers
  5. cannot be applied to moral or ethical questions
88
Q

carrying capacity

A

environmental threshold

89
Q
  1. alteration to water cycle
  2. carbon cycle
  3. nitrogen cycle
  4. phosphorus cycle
  5. sulfur cycle
A
  1. withdrawal of large amounts of freshwater
  2. clearing vegetation
  3. increased flooding when wetlands are drained
  4. tree clearing
  5. burning fossil fuels
  6. burning fossil fuels
  7. commercial inorganic fertilizer or animal manure
  8. destruction of forests, grasslands, and wetlands
  9. agricultural runoff
  10. harvesting nitrogen rich crops
  11. clearing forests
  12. making fertilizers
  13. erosion
  14. burning coal and oil
  15. refining petroleum
  16. converting metallic mineral ores
90
Q

earth’s life support systems

A

atmosphere; hydrosphere; geosphere; and biosphere

91
Q

life on earth depends on…

A

the flow of energy, the cycling of nutrients, and gravity

92
Q

ecological organization

A
  • atom
  • molecule
  • cell
  • organism
  • population
  • community
  • ecosystem
  • biosphere
93
Q

the ability to reproduce quickly; characteristics: high fecundity, small body size, early maturity onset, short generation time, and the ability to disperse offspring widely

A

r-selection

94
Q

the ability to compete successfully for limited resources; characteristics: large body size, long life expectancy, and the production of fewer offspring

A

K-selection

95
Q

carrying capacity

A

environmental threshold

96
Q

population age diagrams

A

expanding rapidly
expanding slowly
stable
declining

97
Q

how to reduce ecological footprint

A

reuse, reduce, recycle

98
Q

Types of diversity

A
  • species diversity
  • genetic diversity
  • ecosystem diversity
  • functional diversity
  • biodiversity