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AP ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AP TEST REVIEW

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159249074Ionizing radiationenough energy to dislodge electrons from atoms, forming ions; capable of causing cancer (gamma, X-rays, UV)
159249075High Quality Energyorganized & concentrated; can perform useful work (fossil fuel & nuclear)
159249076Low Quality Energydisorganized, dispersed (heat in ocean or air wind, solar)
159249077First Law of Thermodynamicsenergy is neither created nor destroyed, but may be converted from one form to another (Law of Conservation of Energy)
159249078Second Law of Thermodynamicswhen energy is changed from one form to another, some useful energy is always degraded into lower quality energy, usually heat
159249079Natural radioactive decayunstable radioisotopes decay releasing gamma rays, alpha particles, and beta particles
159249080Half-lifethe time it takes for ½ the mass of a radioisotope to decay
159249081Estimate of how long a radioactive isotope must be stored until it decays to a safe levelapproximately 10 half-lives
159249082Nuclear Fissionnuclei of isotopes split apart when struck by neutrons
159249083Nuclear Fusiontwo isotopes of light elements (H) forced together at high temperatures till they fuse to form a heavier nucleus (He). Process is expensive; break-even point not reached yet
159249084Orea rock that contains a large enough concentration of a mineral making it profitable to mine
159249085Organic fertilizerslow-acting & long-lasting because the organic remains need time to be decomposed
159249086Best solutions to energy shortageconservation, increase efficiency, explore alternative energy options
159249087Surface miningcheaper and can remove more minerals; less hazardous to workers
159249088Humusorganic, dark material remaining after decomposition by microorganisms
159249089Leachingremoval of dissolved materials from soil by water moving downwards
159249090Illuviationdeposit of leached material in lower soil layers (B horizon)
159249091Loamperfect agricultural soil with optimal portions of sand, silt, clay (40%, 40%, 20%)
159249092Conservationallowing the use of resources in a responsible manner
159249093Preservationsetting aside areas and protecting them from human activities
159249094Parts of the hydrologic cycleevaporation, transpiration, runoff, condensation, precipitation, infiltration
159249095Aquiferany water-bearing layer in the ground
159249096Cone of depressionlowering of the water table around a pumping well
159249097Salt water intrusionnear the coast, over-pumping of groundwater causes saltwater to move into the aquifer
159249098ENSOEl Niño Southern Oscillation, see-sawing of air pressure over the S. Pacific
159249099During an El Niño yeartrade winds weaken & warm water sloshed back to SA
159249100During a non El Niño 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 America
159249101Effects of El Niñoupwelling decreases disrupting food chains; N U.S. has mild winters, SW U.S. has increased rainfall, less Atlantic hurricanes
159249102Nitrogen fixingbecause atmospheric N2 cannot be used directly by plants it must first be converted into ammonia (NH3) by bacteria (rhizobium)
159249103Ammonificationdecomposers convert organic waste into ammonia
159249104Nitrificationammonia (NH3) is converted to nitrate ions (NO3)
159249105Assimilationinorganic nitrogen is converted into organic molecules such as DNA/amino acids & proteins
159249106Denitrificationbacteria convert nitrate (NO3) and nitrite (NO2) back into N2 gas
159249107Phosphorus does not circulate as easily as nitrogen becauseit does not exist as a gas, but is released by weathering of phosphate (PO4) 3 rocks
159249108Sustainabilitythe ability to meet the current needs of humanity without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs
159249109runoff of animal wastes, fertilizer, discharge of sewageHow excess phosphorus is added to aquatic ecosystems
159249110Photosynthesisplants convert atmospheric carbon (CO2) into complex carbohydrates (glucose C6H12O6)
159249111Aerobic respirationO2-consuming producers, consumers & decomposers break down complex organic compounds and convert C back into CO2
159249112Largest reservoirs of Ccarbonate (CO3) 2 rocks first, oceans second
159249113Biotic and abioticliving and nonliving components of an ecosystem
159249114Producer/Autotrophphotosynthetic or chemosynthetic life
159249115Fecal coliform/Enterococcus bacteriaindicator of sewage contamination
159249116Energy flow in food websonly 10% of the usable energy is transferred because usable energy lost as heat (second law); not all biomass is digested and absorbed; predators expend energy to catch prey
159249117Chlorinegood= disinfection of water; bad= forms trihalomethanes
159249118Primary successiondevelopment of communities in a lifeless area not previously inhabited by life or those in which the soil profile is totally destroyed (lava flows); begins with lichen action
159249119Secondary successionlife progresses where soil remains (clear-cut forest, fire)
159249120Cogenerationusing waste heat to make electricity
159249121Mutualismsymbiotic relationship where both partners benefit
159249122Commensalismsymbiotic relationship where one partner benefits & the other is unaffected
159249123Parasitismrelationship in which one partner obtains nutrients at the expense of the host
159249124Biomelarge distinct terrestrial region having similar climate, soil, plants & animals
159249125Carrying capacitythe number of individuals that can be sustained in an area
159249126R strategistreproduce early in life; many small unprotected offspring
159249127K strategistreproduce late in life; few offspring; care for offspring
159249128Positive feedbackwhen a change in some condition triggers a response that intensifies the changing condition (warmer Earth - snow melts - less sunlight is reflected & more is absorbed, therefore warmer earth)
159249129Negative feedbackwhen a changing in some condition triggers a response that counteracts the changed condition (warmer earth - more ocean evaporation - more stratus clouds - less sunlight reaches the ground therefore cooler Earth)
159249130Malthussaid human population cannot continue to increase exponentially; consequences will be war, famine & disease
159249131Doubling timerule of 70; 70 divided by the percent growth rate
159249132Replacement level fertilitythe number of children a couple must have to replace themselves (2.1 in developed countries)
159249133World Population~ 6.7 billion
159249134U.S. Population~ 305 million
159249135Preindustrial stage(demographic transition) birth & death rates high, population grows slowly, infant mortality high
159249136Transitional stage(demographic transition) death rate lower, better health care, population grows fast
159249137Industrial stage(demographic transition) decline in birth rate, population growth slows
159249138Postindustrial stage(demographic transition) low birth & death rates
159249139Age structure diagramsbroad base = rapid growth; narrow base = negative growth; uniform shape = zero growth
1592491401st, 2nd, 3rd most populated countriesChina, India, U.S.
159249141Most important thing affecting population growthlow status of women
159249142Ways to decrease birth ratefamily planning, contraception, economic rewards and penalties
159249143Percent water on earth by type97.5% seawater, 2.5% freshwater
159249144Salinization of soilin arid regions, water evaporates leaving salts behind
159249145Ways to conserve wateragriculture= drip/trickle irrigation; industry= recycling; home= use gray water, repair leaks, low flow fixtures
159249146Point vs. non point sourcesPoint, from specific location such as a pipe. Non-point, from over an area such as runoff
159249147BODbiological oxygen demand, amount of dissolved oxygen needed by aerobic decomposers to break down organic materials
159249148Eutrophicationrapid algal growth caused by an excess of nitrates (NO3) and phosphates (PO4)3 in water
159249149Hypoxiawhen aquatic plants die, the BOD rises as aerobic decomposers break down the plants, the DO drops & the water cannot support life
159249150Minamata disease(1932-1968, Japan) mental impairments caused by methylmercury (CH3Hg) poisoning
159249151primary air pollutantharmful substance that is emitted directly into the atmosphere
159249152Natural selectionorganisms that possess favorable adaptations pass them onto the next generation
159249153Particulate matterSource: burning fossil fuels and diesel exhaust Effect: reduces visibility & respiratory irritation Reduction: filtering, electrostatic precipitators, alternative energy)
159249154Nitrogen Oxides (NOx)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
159249155Sulfur oxides (SOx)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)
159249156Carbon oxides (CO and CO2)Source: auto exhaust, incomplete combustion Effects: CO binds to hemoglobin, reducing blood's ability to carry O2; CO2 contributes to global warming Reduction: catalytic converter, emission testing, oxygenated fuel, mass transit
159249157OzoneFormation: secondary pollutant, NO2 + uv = NO + O* O* + O2 = O3, with VOCs (volatile organic compounds) Effects: respiratory irritant, plant damage Reduction: reduce NO and VOC emissions O3
159249158Radonnaturally occurring colorless, odorless, radioactive gas, found in some types of soil and rock, can seep into homes and buildings, formed from the decay of uranium (U), causes lung cancer, Rn
159249159Photochemical smogformed by chemical reactions involving sunlight (NO, VOC, O*)
159249160Acid depositioncaused by sulfuric and nitric acids (H2SO4, HNO3), resulting in lowered pH of surface waters
159249161Greenhouse gasesExamples: H2O, CO2, O3, chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), methane (CH4). Effect: they trap outgoing infrared (heat) energy, causing Earth to warm
160285807Effects of global warmingrising sea level (thermal expansion), extreme weather, drought, famine, extinctions
160285808Causes of ozone depletionCFCs, methyl chloroform or trichloromethane (CHCl3), carbon tetrachloride (CCl4), halon (haloalkanes), methyl bromide (CHBr)— all of which attack stratospheric ozone
160285809Effects of ozone depletionincreased UV, skin cancer, cataracts, decreased plant growth
160285810Love Canal, NY(1950s +) chemicals buried in old canal; school and homes built over it; caused birth defects and cancer
160285811Main component of municipal solid waste (MSW)paper; most is landfilled
160285812True cost / External costsharmful environmental side effects that are not reflected in a product's price
160285813Sanitary landfill problems and solutionsproblem= leachate; solution= liner with collection system problem= methane gas; solution= collect gas and burn problem= volume of garbage; solution= compact and reduce
160285814Incineration advantagesvolume of waste reduced by 90%, and waste heat can be used
160285815Incineration disadvantagestoxic emissions (polyvinyl chloride, dioxins), scrubbers and electrostatic precipitators needed, ash disposal (contains heavy metals)
160285816Best way to solve waste problemreduce the amounts of waste at the source
160285817Keystone speciesspecies whose role in an ecosystem are more important than others. EG: sea otter, sea stars, grizzly bear, prairie dogs
160285818Indicator speciesspecies that serve as early warnings that an ecosystem is being damaged. EG: trout
160285819Characteristics of endangered speciessmall range, large territory, or live on an island
160285820In natural ecosystems, methods which control 50-90% of pestspredators, diseases, parasites
160285821Major insecticide groups (and examples)chlorinated hydrocarbons (DDT); organophosphates (malathion); carbamates (aldicarb)
160285822Pesticide prossaves human lives from insect-transmitted disease, increases food supply, increases profits for farmers
160285823Pesticide consgenetic resistance, ecosystem imbalance, pesticide treadmill, persistence, bioaccumulation, biological magnification
160285824Natural pest controlbetter agricultural practices, genetically resistant plants, natural enemies, biopesticides, sex attractants
160285825Electricity generation methodsusing steam from water boiled by fossils fuels or nuclear reactions; falling water to turn a turbine to power a generator
160285826Petroleum formationmicroscopic aquatic organisms in sediments converted by heat and pressure into a mixture of hydrocarbons
160285827Pros of petroleumrelatively cheap, easily transported, high-quality energy
160285828Cons of petroleumreserves will be depleted soon; pollution during drilling, transport and refining; burning makes CO2
160285829Steps in coal formationpeat, lignite, bituminous, anthracite
160285830Major parts of a nuclear reactorcore, control rods, steam generator, turbine, containment building
160285831Two most serious nuclear accidentsChernobyl, Ukraine (1986) and Three Mile Island, PA (1979)
160285832Alternate energy sourceswind, solar, waves, biomass, geothermal, fuel cells
160285833LD50 (LD-50, LD50)50the amount of a chemical that kills 50% of the animals in a test population
160285834Mutagen; Teratogen; Carcinogen(in order) causes hereditary changes through mutations; causes fetus deformities; causes cancer
160285835Endangered speciesa group of organisms in danger of becoming extinct if the situation is not improved; population numbers have dropped below the critical number of organisms. EG: North spotted owl, Arctic polar bear
160285836Invasive/Alien/Exotic speciesnon-native species to an area; often thrive and disrupt the ecosystem balance. EG: kudzu vine, purple loosestrife, African honeybee, "killer bee", water hyacinth, fire ant, zebra mussel
160285837The Tragedy of the Commons(1968 paper by ecologist Garret Hardin) Global commons such as atmosphere and oceans are used by all and owned by none.
160285838Volcano and Earthquake occurrenceat plate boundaries (divergent= spreading, mid-ocean ridges) (convergent= trenches) (transform= sliding, San Andreas)
160285839Sources of mercuryburning coal, compact fluorescent bulbs
160285840Major source of sulfurburning coal
160285841Threshold dosethe maximum dose that has no measurable effect
160285842Temperature Inversionlayer of dense, cool air trapped under a layer of warm dense air, pollution in trapped layer may build to harmful levels. Frequent in Los Angeles, California and Mexico City, Mexico
160285843Transpirationprocess where water is absorbed by plant roots, moves up through plants, passes through pores (stomata) in leaves or other parts, evaporates into atmosphere as water vapor
160285844Monoculturecultivation of a single crop, usually in a large area
160285845FoodWheat, rice and corn provide more than ½ of the calories in the food consumed by the world's people
160285846Forest FiresTypes - Surface, Crown, Ground (in order) usually burn only under growth and leaf litter on forest floor; hot fires, may start on ground but eventually leap from treetop to treetop; go underground, may smolder for days or weeks, difficult to detect and extinguish. EG: peat bogs
160285847Surface Mining Control & Reclamation Act(SMCRA, 1977) requires coal strip mines to reclaim the land
160285848Madrid Protocol(1991) Suspension of mineral exploration (mining) for 50 years in Antarctica
160285849Safe Drinking Water Act(SDWA, 1974) set maximum contaminant levels for pollutants in drinking water that may have adverse effects on human health
160285850Clean Water Act(CWA, 1972) set maximum permissible amounts of water pollutants that can be discharged into waterways; aims to make surface waters swimmable and fishable
160285851Ocean Dumping Ban Act(ODBA, 1988) bans ocean dumping of sewage sludge and industrial waste in the ocean
160285852Clean Air Act(CAA, 1970) set emission standards for cars and limits for release of air pollutants
160285853Kyoto Protocol(KP, 2005) controlling global warming by setting greenhouse gas emissions targets for developed countries
160285854Montreal Protocol(1987) phase-out of ozone depleting substances
160285855Resource Conservation & Recovery Act(RCRA)(1976) controls hazardous waste with a cradle to grave system
160285856Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation & Liability Act(CERCLA) (1980) "Superfund", designed to identify and clean up abandoned hazardous waste dump sites
160285857Nuclear Waste Policy Act(1982) U.S. government must develop a high level nuclear waste site (Yucca Mountain)
160285858Endangered Species Act(1973) identifies threatened and endangered species in the U.S., and puts their protection ahead of economic considerations
160285859Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species(CITES) (1973) lists species that cannot be commercially traded as live specimens or wildlife products
160285860Magnuson-Stevens Act(1976) Management of marine fisheries
160285861Food Quality Protection Act(1996) set pesticide limits in food, and all active and inactive ingredients must be screened for estrogenic/endocrine effects
160285862National Environmental Policy Act(NEPA, 1969) Environmental Impact Statements must be completed before any project affecting federal lands can be started
160285863Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants(2004) Seeks to protect human health from the 12 most toxic chemicals (includes 8 chlorinated hydrocarbon pesticides/DDT can be used for malaria control)

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