B6.1 - Monitering & Maintaining The Environment Flashcards

1
Q

Sampling

A

Taking observations & measurements from a small area, representative of a larger area to estimate

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2
Q

Apparatus & techniques to collect living animals:

A
  • Pooters
  • Sweep nets
  • kick sampling
  • tree beating
  • pitfall traps
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3
Q

Pooters

A
  • suck on mouthpiece to draw insects into holding chamber

- filter stops organisms entering mouth

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4
Q

Sweep nets

A

sweep large net through air to catch flying insects / insects in long grass

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5
Q

Kick sampling

A
  • ‘kick’ river bank/bed to disturb mud/vegetation

- hold net downstream to capture organisms released into flowing water

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6
Q

Tree beating

A
  • stretch large white cloth under tree/bush

- shake/beat tree to dislodge invertebrates, will fall into cloth

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7
Q

Pitfall traps

A
  • dig hole in ground
  • crawling invertebrates (beetles, spiders, slugs) will fall into
  • cover hole with roof so trap doesn’t fill with rain water
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8
Q

Types of identification keys (to identify living organisms)

A
  • branched key: answer yes/no for each question

- numbered key: correct answer to a question tells you which question to answer next

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9
Q

Capture-recapture technique

A
  1. Capture organisms from sample area
  2. Mark individual organisms, then release back into community
  3. At later date, recapture organisms in original sample area
  4. Record number of marked & unmarked individuals
  5. Estimate population size
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10
Q

Estimated population size equation (capture-recapture technique)

A

Estimated population size = (first sample size x seconds sample size) / no. of recaptured marked individuals

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11
Q

Quadrat, how do you sample plants

A

Square frame divided into a grid

  • place it onto ground to take sample & record type & no. of organisms within each section
  • take multiple samples & calculate mean average for accurate results
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12
Q

Random sampling

A
  • position of sample not pre-determined
  • individuals selected by chance
  • prevents bias
    Eg. Number generator to give random coordinates
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13
Q

Non random sampling

A
  • systematically choosing where to take a sample
  • transect: samples taken along line, place quadrat at fixed positions along line
    Eg. To see how plant species change as move inland from sea
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14
Q

Why is biodiversity important

A
  • species interconnected, so removal of 1 species can affect others
  • essential for maintaining balanced ecosystem
  • humans rely on biodiversity for raw materials (food, wood, oxygen)
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15
Q

How is biodiversity lost

A

increased need for food & materials due to increased population causes:

  • deforestation
  • agriculture
  • hunting & fishing
  • pollution
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16
Q

Deforestation

A
  • removing forest provides wood for building/fuel & creates space for roads/buildings/agriculture
  • reduces no. of trees & no. of supported animal species as food source & home lost, can also affect predator species
17
Q

Agriculture

A

Many intensive farming techniques(for increased population):

  • remove hedgerows to use large machinery & extra land for crops: reduces no. of plant species & destroys habitat of animals (mice/hedgehogs)
  • pesticides to kill pests that eat crops/live on livestock: removes food source (pests) of other organisms, can ruin food chain, killing animals not targeted
  • herbicides to kill plants growing where not wanted: reduces no. of plant species present & no. of animal species present (removes food/shelter)
18
Q

Fishing

A
  • overfishing = some fish populations decrease significantly/extinct in some area
  • other marine species may be caught/killed
19
Q

Hunting

A
  • decreases target species population, removes food for other species (ruins food chain)
  • allow unchecked growth of some plant species, outcompete other plants
20
Q

Pollution

A

generally, more polluted area = fewer no. of species that can survive

21
Q

Techniques to prevent biodiversity loss

A
  • conservation
  • seed banks
  • captive/selective breeding
22
Q

Conservation techniques

A
  • controlled grazing (only allow animals to graze land for certain period of time, plant species have time to recover)
  • restricting human access (providing paths, prevent plants being trampled)
  • feeding animals (ensure organisms survive to reproductive age)
  • reintroduction of species (adding new individuals of species to area where numbers decreases significantly / species haven’t survived)
23
Q

Captive breeding

A
  • breeding animals in human-controlled environments (zoo/aquarium)
  • animals given shelter, nutritious food, veterinary treatment, predator-free environment
  • suitable breeding partners imported from other zoos
24
Q

Aim of captive breeding

A
  • create stable, healthy population of species

- gradually reintroduce species back into its natural habitat

25
Q

Problems with captive breeding

A
  • maintaining genetic diversity difficult since few breeding partners available
  • organisms born in captivity not suitable to release into wild (predators may not know how to hunt, prey how to survive)
26
Q

Seed banks

A
  • way of conserving plants to prevent extinction
  • seeds carefully stored so new plants may be grown in future
  • gene bank (store of genetic material)
    Eg. Millennium Seed Bank Project at Kew Gardens, large underground frozen vaults preserve billions of seeds
27
Q

International agreements to maintain biodiversity

A
  • IUCN
  • CITES
  • Rio Conventions
28
Q

IUCN

A

= International Union for the Conservation of Nature

  • publishes the ‘Red list’ which details current conservation status of threatened animals
  • countries work together to conserve these species
29
Q

CITES

A

= Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora

  • regulates international trade of wild plants & animals & their products to prevent over-exploitation
  • protects more than 35,000 species
30
Q

Rio Conventions

A
  • require countries to develop strategies for sustainable development
  • to reduce greenhouse emissions & combat desertification
  • aim to maintain biodiversity, but countries not forced to implement them
31
Q

Local agreements to maintain biodiversity

A

Stewardship Schemes:

  • farmers in England offered government payments to conserve landscape
  • aim to make conservation part of normal farming practices
32
Q

Ecotourism

A

Form of tourism that minimises the impact of visitors on he environment

33
Q

Indicator species

A

Organisms that can be used to measure environmental quality

Their presence/absence tell biologists if an area is polluted

34
Q

Sulfur dioxide

A
  • released from combustion of some fossil fuels

- causes acid rain, can result in death of trees/fish

35
Q

What indicator species is used to measure sulfur dioxide air pollution

A

LICHENS

  • no root systems, most nutrients come from air
  • rainwater contains enough nutrients to keep them alive
  • acid rain can damage lichens & prevent their growth
  • some species can cope with high levels of pollutions, other grow in clear air
  • lack of lichens sign of high pollution
36
Q

Water pollution

A
  • caused by discharge of harmful substances into rivers, lakes, seas
  • higher level pollution = lower level of dissolved oxygen
  • indicator species used to indicate oxygen content in water as some enquire higher oxygen content than others
37
Q

Indicator species to monitor water pollution

A

Unpolluted = mayfly larva
Low pollution = freshwater shrimp
High pollution = water louse
Very high pollution = sludgeworm