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6601655589Ionizing Radiationenough energy to knock electrons from atoms forming ions; capable of causing cancer; gamma, X-rays, UV0
6601655590High Quality Energyorganized and concentrated, can perform useful work (fossil fuel & nuclear)1
6601655591Low Quality Energydisorganized, dispersed (heat in ocean or air, wind, solar)2
6601655592First Law of Thermodynamicsenergy is neither created nor destroyed, but may be converted from one form to another3
6601655593Second Law of Thermodynamicswhen energy is changed from one form to another, some useful energy is always degraded into lower quality energy (usually heat)4
6601655594Natural radioactive decayunstable radioisotopes decay releasing gamma rays, alpha & beta particles5
6601655595Half lifethe time it takes for ½ the mass of a radioisotope to decay6
6601655596Approximately 10 half-livesestimate of how long a radioactive isotope must be stored until it decays to a safe level7
6601655597Nuclear Fissionnuclei of isotopes split apart when struck by neutrons8
6601655598Nuclear Fusion2 isotopes of light elements (H) forced together at high temperatures till they fuse to form a heavier nucleus. Expensive, break even point not reached yet9
6601655599Orea rock that contains a large enough concentration of a mineral making it profitable to mine10
6601655600Mineral Reserve vs Organic fertilizerMineral Reserve: identified deposits currently profitable to extract Organic fertilizer: slow acting & long lasting because the organic remains need time to be decomposed11
6601655601Best solution to energy shortageconservation and increased efficiency12
6601655602Surface miningcheaper & can remove more mineral, less hazardous to workers13
6601655603Humusorganic, dark material remaining after decomposition by microorganisms14
6601655604Leachingremoval of dissolved materials from soil by water moving downwards15
6601655605Illuviationdeposit of leached material in lower soil layers (B)16
6601655606Loamperfect agricultural soil with equal portions of sand, silt, clay17
6601655607Solutions to soil problemsconservation tillage, crop rotation, contour plowing, organic fertilizers18
6601655608Parts of the hydrologic cycleevaporation, transpiration, runoff, condensation, precipitation, infiltration19
6601655609Aquiferany water bearing layer in the ground20
6601655610Cone of depressionlowering of the water table around a pumping well21
6601655611ENSOEl Nino Southern Oscillation, see-sawing of air pressure over the S. Pacific22
6601655612During an El Nino yearN US has mild winters, SW US has increased rainfall, less Atlantic hurricanes, trade winds weaken, and warm water is sloshed back to S. America. These decrease upwelling which disrupts food chains.23
6601655613During a non El Nino yearEasterly trade winds and ocean currents pool warm water in the western Pacific, allowing upwelling of nutrient rich water off the West coast of South America24
6601655614Nitrogen fixingbecause atmospheric N cannot be used directly by plants it must first be converted into ammonia by bacteria (rhizobium)25
6601655615Phosphorus does not circulate as easily as N becauseit does not exist as a gas, but is released by weathering of phosphate rocks26
6601655616Ammonificationdecomposers covert organic waste into ammonia27
6601655617Nitrificationammonia is converted to nitrate ions (NO-3)28
6601655618Assimilationinorganic N is converted into organic molecules such as DNA/amino acids & proteins29
6601655619Denitrificationbacteria convert ammonia back into N30
6601655620Sustainabilitythe ability to meet humanities current needs without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs31
6601655621Because soils contain very little phosphorusit is a major limiting factor for plant growth32
6601655622Excess phosphorus is added to aquatic ecosystems byrunoff of animal wastes, fertilizer, discharge of sewage33
6601655623Photosynthesisplants convert atmospheric C (CO2) into complex carbohydrates (glucose C6H12O6)34
6601655624Aerobic respirationoxygen consuming producers, consumers & decomposers break down complex organic compounds & convert C back into CO235
6601655625Largest reservoirs of Ccarbonate rocks first, oceans second36
6601655626Biotic/abioticliving & nonliving components of an ecosystem37
6601655627Producer/Autotrophphotosynthetic life38
6601655628Fecal coliform/Enterococcusindicator of sewage contamination39
6601655629The major trophic levelsproducers-primary consumer-secondary consumer-tertiary consumer40
6601655630Energy flow in food websproducers-primary consumer-secondary consumer-tertiary consumer where only 10% of the energy transfers over to the next trophic level41
6601655631Chlorine(good: disinfection of water) ( bad: forms trihalomethanes)42
6601655632Primary vs secondary succession1 - development of communities in a lifeless area not previously inhabited by life (lava) 2 - life progresses where soil remains (clear cut forest, fire)43
6601655633Cogenerationusing waste heat to make electricity44
6601655634Mutualismsymbiotic relationship where both partners benefit45
6601655635Commensalismsymbiotic relationship where one partner benefits & the other is unaffected46
6601655636Parasitismrelationship in which one partner obtains nutrients at the expense of the host47
6601655637Biomelarge distinct terrestrial region having similar climate, soil, plants & animals48
6601655638Carrying capacitythe number of individuals that can be sustained in an area49
6601655639R vs K strategistR - reproduce early, many small unprotected offspring K - reproduce late, few, cared for offspring50
6601655640Positive feedbackwhen a change in some condition triggers a response that intensifies the changing condition (EX: warmer Earth - snow melts - less sunlight is reflected & more is absorbed, therefore warmer earth)51
6601655641Natural selectionorganisms that possess favorable adaptations pass them onto the next generation52
6601655642Malthussaid human population cannot continue to increase. Consequences will be war, famine & disease53
6601655643Doubling timerule of 70 (70 divided by the percent growth rate)54
6601655644Replacement level fertilitythe number of children a couple must have to replace themselves (2.1 developed, 2.7 developing)55
6601655645World vs US PopulationWorld - 7.2 billion US - 320 million56
6601655646Preindustrial stagebirth & death rates high, population grows slowly, infant mortality high57
6601655647Transitional stagedeath rate lower, better health care, population grows fast58
6601655648Industrial stagedecline in birth rate, population growth slows59
6601655649Postindustrial stagelow birth & death rates60
6601655650Age structure diagrams(broad base, rapid growth) (narrow base, negative growth) (uniform shape, zero growth)61
66016556511st & 2nd most populated countriesChina (1.36 billion) & India (1.25 billion)62
6601655652Most important thing affecting population growthlow status of women63
6601655653Ways to decrease birth ratefamily planning, contraception, economic rewards & penalties64
6601655654Percent water on earth by type97.5% seawater, 2.5% freshwater65
6601655655Salinization of soilin arid regions, water evaporates leaving salts behind66
6601655656Ways to conserve water(agriculture: drip/trickle irrigation) (industry: recycling) (home: use gray water, repair leaks, low flow fixtures)67
6601655657Point vs non point sourcesPoint - from specific location such as pipe Non-point - from over an area such as runoff68
6601655658BODbiological oxygen demand; amount of dissolved oxygen needed by aerobic decomposers to break down organic materials69
6601655659Eutrophicationrapid algal growth caused by an excess of N & P70
6601655660Hypoxiawhen aquatic plants die, the BOD rises as aerobic decomposers break down the plants, the DO drops & the water cannot support life71
6601655661Minamata Diseasemental impairments caused by mercury72
6601655662Primary air pollutantsproduced by humans & nature (CO, CO2, SO2, NO, hydrocarbons, particulates)73
6601655663Secondary pollutantsformed by reaction of primary pollutants74
6601655664Negative feedbackwhen a change in some condition triggers a response that counteracts the changed condition (EX: warmer earth - more ocean evaporation - more stratus clouds - less sunlight reaches the ground - therefore cooler Earth)75
6601655665Particulate matter(source: burning fossil fuels & diesel exhaust) (effect: reduces visibility & respiratory irritation) (reduction: filtering, electrostatic precipitators, alternative energy)76
6601655666Nitrogen Oxides(Source: auto exhaust) (Effects: acidification of lakes, respiratory irritation, leads to smog & ozone) (Equation for acid formation: NO + O2 = NO2 + H2O = HNO3) (Reduction: catalytic converter)77
6601655667Sulfur oxides(Source: coal burning) (Effects: acid deposition, respiratory irritation, damages plants) (Equation for acid formation: SO2 + O2 = SO3 + H2O = H2SO4) (Reduction: scrubbers, burn low sulfur fuel)78
6601655668Carbon oxides(Source: auto exhaust, incomplete combustion) (Effects: CO binds to hemoglobin reducing bloods ability to carry O2, CO2 contributes to global warming) (Reduction: catalytic converter, emission testing, oxygenated fuel, mass transit)79
6601655669Ozone(Formation: secondary pollutant, NO2 + UV = NO + O, O + O2 = O3, with VOCs) (Effects: respiratory irritant, plant damage) (Reduction: reduce NO emissions & VOCs)80
6601655670Radonradioactive gas, formed from the decay of Uranium, causes lung cancer and is a problem in the Reading Prong81
6601655671Industrial smogfound in cities that burn large amounts of coal82
6601655672Photochemical smogformed by chemical reactions involving sunlight (NO, VOC,O2)83
6601655673Acid depositioncaused by sulfuric and nitric acids resulting in lowered pH of surface waters84
6601655674Greenhouse gases(Examples: H2O, CO2, O3, methane (CH4), CFC's) (Effect: they trap outgoing infrared (heat) energy causing earth to warm85
6601655675Ozone depletion caused byCFC's, methyl chloroform, carbon tetrachloride, halon, methyl bromide all of which attack stratospheric ozone86
6601655676Effects of ozone depletionincreased UV, skin cancer, cataracts, decreased plant growth87
6601655677Love Canal, NYchemicals buried in old canal and school & homes built over it causing birth defects & cancer88
6601655678Municipal solid waste is mostlypaper and usually dumped in landfills89
6601655679True cost / External costsharmful environmental side effects that are not reflected in a products price90
6601655680Sanitary landfill problems and solutions(leachate: liner with collection system) (methane gas: collect gas and burn) (volume of garbage: compact & reduce)91
6601655681Incineration advantagesvolume of waste reduced by 90% & waste heat can be used92
6601655682Incineration disadvantagestoxic emissions (polyvinyl chloride—dioxin), scrubbers & electrostatic precipitators needed, ash disposal (contains heavy metals)93
6601655683Best way to solve waste problemreduce the amounts of waste at the source94
6601655684Keystone speciesspecies whose role in an ecosystem are more important than others, ex sea otter95
6601655685Indicator speciesspecies that serve as early warnings that an ecosystem is being damaged ex trout96
6601655686Endangered specieshave a small range, require large territory or live on an island97
6601655687In natural ecosystems, 50-90% of pest species are kept under control bypredators, diseases, parasites98
6601655688Major insecticide groups and examples(chlorinated hydrocarbons, DDT) (organophosphates, malathion) (carbamates, aldicarb)99
6601655689Pesticide prossaves lives from insect transmitted disease, increases food supply, increases profits for farmers100
6601655690Pesticide consgenetic resistance, ecosystem imbalance, pesticide treadmill, persistence, bioaccumulation, biological magnification101
6601655691Natural pest controlbetter agricultural practices, genetically resistant plants, natural enemies, biopesticides, sex attractants102
6601655692Electricity is generated byusing steam (from water boiled by fossils fuels or nuclear) or falling water to turn a generator103
6601655693Petroleum forms frommicroscopic aquatic organisms in sediments converted by heat & pressure into a mixture of hydrocarbons104
6601655694Pros of petroleumcheap, easily transported, high quality energy105
6601655695Cons of petroleumreserves depleted soon, pollution during drilling, transport and refining, burning makes CO2106
6601655696Steps in coal formationpeat, lignite, bituminous, anthracite107
6601655697Major parts of a nuclear reactorcore, control rods, steam generator, turbine, containment building108
6601655698Most serious nuclear accidents(Chernobyl, Ukraine, 1986, Level 7) (Fukushima, Japan, 2011, Level 7) (Kyshtym, Russia, 1957, Level 6) (Lucens, Vaud, Switzerland, 1969, Level 5) (Three Mile Island, PA, USA, 1979, Level 5)109
6601655699Alternate energy sourceswind, solar, waves, biomass, geothermal, fuel cells110
6601655700LD50the amount of a chemical that kills 50% of the animals in a test population111
6601655701Mutagen, Teratogen, Carcinogencauses hereditary changes, fetus deformities, cancer112
6601655702Multiple use US public landNational Forest & National Resource lands113
6601655703Moderately restricted use landNational Wildlife Refuges114
6601655704Restricted Use landsNational Parks, National Wilderness Preservation System115
6601655705Examples and cause of endangered speciesNorth Spotted Owl (loss of old growth forest), Bald Eagle (thinning of eggs caused by DDT), Piping Plover (nesting areas threatened by development)116
6601655706Examples of invasive exotic speciesGypsy Moth (native to Europe and Asia, they feed on the foliage of oaks and aspen), Asian Long Horned Beetle (native to Japan, the larva tunnels and feeds on hardwood trees like maple and birch), Kudzu (a fast-growing vine that grows at least a foot a day)117
6601655707Garret Hardin & the Tragedy of the CommonsFreedom to breed is bringing ruin to all. Global commons such as atmosphere & oceans are used by all and owned by none118
6601655708Volcanoes and Earthquakes occurat plate boundaries (divergent, spreading, mid-ocean ridges) (convergent, trenches) (transform, sliding, San Andreas)119
6601655709Sources of mercuryburning coal, Compact Fluorescent bulbs120
6601655710Major source of sulfurburning coal121
6601655711Threshold dosethe maximum dose that has no measurable effect122
6601655712Survivorship Curves[Type I: low mortality at birth, survive to old age, and then die (humans, annual plants)], [Type II: uniform death rates, subject to predation (insects, birds)], [Type III: high mortality at birth but long lifespan otherwise (turtles, trees)]123
6601655713Density dependent vs. density-independent factorsDD - competition, parasitism, predation DI - fires, floods, extreme cold124
6601655714Biotic potentialmaximum number of offspring a species can have125
6601655715Effects of Global Warmingbleaching of coral reefs, animals and plants forced out of their current range, melting glaciers, rising sea level, droughts, spread of infectious diseases and more extreme weather conditions126
6601655716Exotic species are often also invasive species becausethey often can grow at an uncontrolled rate because they have no natural predators, disrupt the balance of the ecosystem and have no competition because they kill off many natural inhabitants127
6601655717Clear cutting is bad becauseit increases soil erosion dramatically, increases nitrate runoff into water bodies, makes it hard for an area to recover, leaves animals no place to live and can lead to extinctions128
6601655718Selective Cuttingharvesting only mature trees of certain species and size. More expensive but less disruptive to wildlife than clear cutting129
6601655719Utilitarianismthe belief that something is right if it produces the greatest good for the greatest number of people for the longest time130
6601655720Conservationthe management of a resource to make certain it produces the greatest benefit to humans in the future131
6601655721Preservationthe concept that the land should be kept in its natural state - never touched or developed132
6601655722NIMBYNot In My BackYard. Public protests cause wastes and other pollutants to be dumped in someone else's backyard. Mostly hurts the poor who cannot pay for representation to fight against potential pollution133
6601655723Range of Toleranceminimum and maximum levels of conditions in which organisms can survive134
66016557241.5 billion vs 3 billion people1.5B - lack access to clean drinking water 3B - lack good sanitation135
660165572575% of water pollution in the US come fromsoil erosion, atmospheric deposition and surface run off136
660165572695% of water pollution in developing countries come fromraw sewage (high population growth without the money for treatment plants)137
6601655727How much pesticide the US uses77% of all pesticides used in world138
6601655728Troposphere vs. Stratospheretroposphere contains weather and stratosphere contains the ozone139
6601655729The atmosphere contains78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, and a small amount of argon, carbon dioxide, water, salt and dust140
6601655730Weather movesfrom west to east across America and winds are named for the direction they come from141
6601655731Bioaccumulationthe selective absorption and storage of a great variety of molecules142
6601655732Biomagnificationa continued increase in the concentration of pollutants in higher levels of a food chain143
6601655733Acute effectscaused by a single exposure to a toxin and results in an immediate health crisis of some sort144
6601655734Chronic effectslong lasting and can result from a single exposure of a very toxic substance or a continuous exposure to the toxin145
6601655735Salt water intrusionthe movement of salt water into freshwater aquifers in coastal areas where groundwater is withdrawn faster than it's replenished146
6601655736Watershedland surface and groundwater aquifers drained by a particular river system147
6601655737Forests cover32% of the land surface, 11% is used for crops and 26% is range and pasture148
660165573899% of all the species that ever existedare now extinct but the average rate of extinction was one species per decade149
6601655739Humans have caused extinction ratesof hundreds to thousands of species per YEAR. If these trends continue, 1/3 to 2/3 of all current species will be lost by the year 2050150
6601655740Denitrificationbacteria convert ammonia back into N151

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