8310161892 | tragedy of the commons | the tendency of a shared, limited resource to become depleted because people act from self-interest for short-term gain | 0 | |
8310161893 | externality | the unintended side effect of an action that affects something not involved in the action and is not included in the purchasing price etc. | 1 | |
8310161894 | maximum sustainable yield | the maximum amount that can be harvested without compromising the future availability of that resource | 2 | |
8310161895 | national park | a tract of land declared by the national government to be public property used for scientific, educational, and recreational use | 3 | |
8310161896 | managed resource protected areas | allows for the sustained use of biological, mineral, and recreational resources | 4 | |
8310161897 | habitat and species management areas | areas actively managed to maintain biological species and habitat | 5 | |
8310161898 | strict nature reserves and wilderness areas | areas established to protect species and ecosystems | 6 | |
8310161899 | protected landscapes and seascapes | areas combined with the nondestructive use of natural resources with oppurtunities for tourism and recreation (orchards, villages, beaches) | 7 | |
8310161900 | national monuments | areas set aside to protect unique sites of special natural or cultural interest | 8 | |
8310161901 | resource conservation ethic | states that people should maximize resource use based on the greatest good for everyone (economic, scientific,recreational, and aesthetic) | 9 | |
8310161902 | multiple use lands | public lands that can be used for recreation, grazing, timber harvesting, and mineral extraction, wildlife preserving, or scentific research | 10 | |
8310161903 | Bureau of Land Management | (BML) used for grazing, mining, timber harvesting, and recreation | 11 | |
8310161904 | US Forest Service | (USFS) used for timber harvesting, grazing, and recreation | 12 | |
8310161905 | National Park Service | (NPS) used for recreation and conservation | 13 | |
8310161906 | US Fish and Wildlife Service | (FWS) used for wildlife conservation, hunting, and recreation | 14 | |
8310161907 | rangelands | dry, open grasslands used for cattle grazing (the most common use for land in the USA) | 15 | |
8310161908 | clearcutting | a timber harvesting technique that involves removing all or almost all the trees within an area. This has a big short term profit. Quick growing trees will do well with a lot of sunlight. This technique increases wind and water erosion, sediments nearby streams, harms aquatic populatins, mudslides, heating of water | 16 | |
8310161909 | selective cutting | a timber harvesting technique that involves the removal of sins trees or relatively ssmal numbers of trees from among many in a forest. This produces optimum growth from shade tolerant trees. It is a less extensively damaging technique. Transporting logs can lead to road creation and soil impaction | 17 | |
8310161910 | ecologically sustainable forestry | an approach that has a goal of maintaining all species in as close a natural state as possible | 18 | |
8310161911 | tree plantations | large areas typically planted with a single rapidly growing tree species | 19 | |
8310161912 | prescribed burn | a deliberate fire set to reduce the accumulation of dead biomass | 20 | |
8310161913 | National Environmental Policy Act | (NEPA) An act from 1969 that mandates an environmental assessment of all projects involving federal money or federal permits | 21 | |
8310161914 | Environmental Impact Statement | (EIS) A NEPA rule that require an outline of the scope and purpose of a federal project. It must describe the environmental context, suggest alternative aproaches to the project and analyzes the environmental impact of each alternative | 22 | |
8310161915 | Environmental mitigation plan | a plan that states how a developer will address the environmental impact of a project or building | 23 | |
8310161916 | Endangered Species Act of 1973 | A 1973 law designed to protect species from extinction | 24 | |
8310161917 | National wildlife refuges | the only federal public lands managed for the primary purpose of protecting wildlife | 25 | |
8310161918 | National wilderness areas | areas set aside with the intent of preserving large tracts of intact ecosystems or landscapes | 26 | |
8310161919 | suburban | areas sourrounding metropolitan centers with low population densities | 27 | |
8310161920 | exurban | similar to suburban areas but not connected to any central city or densely populated area | 28 | |
8310161921 | urban sprawl | the creation of urbanized areas that spread into rural areas and remove clear boundaries between the two | 29 | |
8310161922 | urban blight | the degradation of the built and social environments of the city that often accompanies and accelerates migration to the suburbs | 30 | |
8310161923 | Highway Trust Fund | A U.S. federal fund that pays for the construction and maintenance of roads and highways begun by the Highway Revenue Act of 1956 | 31 | |
8310161924 | induced demand | when an increase in the supply of a good causes demand to grow | 32 | |
8310161925 | zoning | a planning tool developed in the 20s to seperate industry and business from residential neighborhoods | 33 | |
8310161926 | smart growth | stratagies that encourage the development of sustainable healthy communities. They include mixed land uses, creating choice in housing opportunities and walkable neighborhoods, compact building design, a sense of place, preserved spaces of beauty, vareity of transportation, etc. | 34 | |
8310161927 | stakeholders | poeple with an interest in a particular place or issue | 35 | |
8310161928 | transit oriented development | A mixed-use residential or commercial area designed to maximize access to public transport, and often incorporates features to encourage transit ridership | 36 | |
8310161929 | infill | the process of filling in empty or rundown parts of a city with new development | 37 | |
8310161930 | urban growth boundaries | A regional boundary, set in an attempt to control urban sprawl by mandating that the area inside the boundary be used for higher density urban development and the area outside to be used for lower density development. Used by local governments as a guide to zoning and land use decisions | 38 | |
8310161931 | eminent domain | the right of the state to take private property for public use | 39 |
APES Friedland Chapter 10 Flashcards
Primary tabs
Need Help?
We hope your visit has been a productive one. If you're having any problems, or would like to give some feedback, we'd love to hear from you.
For general help, questions, and suggestions, try our dedicated support forums.
If you need to contact the Course-Notes.Org web experience team, please use our contact form.
Need Notes?
While we strive to provide the most comprehensive notes for as many high school textbooks as possible, there are certainly going to be some that we miss. Drop us a note and let us know which textbooks you need. Be sure to include which edition of the textbook you are using! If we see enough demand, we'll do whatever we can to get those notes up on the site for you!