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6365688123Chemical cyclingContinue cycling of the chemicals necessary for life through natural processes such as the water cycle and feeding interactions; processes that evolved due to the fact of the earth gets essentially no new inputs of these chemicals.0
6365688124Natural capitalNatural resources and natural services that keep us and other species alive and support our economies1
6365688125Natural services (ecosystem services)Processes of nature, such as purification of air and water and pest control, which support life and human economies2
6365688126Inexhaustible resource (perpetual)Essentially inexhaustible resource on a human timescale because it is renewed continuously. Solar energy is an example3
6365688127Renewable resourceResource that can be replenished rapidly through natural processes as long as it is not used up faster than it is replaced4
6365688128Exhaustible (nonrenewable)Resource that exists in a fixed amount in the earth's crust and has the potential for renewal by geological, physical, and chemical processes taking place over hundreds of millions to billions of years5
6365688129Environmental degradationDepletion or destruction of a potentially renewable resources such as soil, grassland, forest, or wildlife that is used faster than it is naturally replenished6
6365688131Point sourceSingle identifiable source the discharges pollutants into the environment7
6365688132Nonpoint sourceBroad and diffuse areas, rather than points, from which pollutants enter bodies of surface water or air8
6365688133Pollution cleanupDevice or process that removes or reduces the level of a pollutant after it been produced or has entered into the environment9
6365688134Pollution preventionDevice, process, or strategy used to prevent a potential pollutant from forming or entering the environment or to sharply reduce the amount entering the environment10
6365688135AffluenceWell that results in higher levels of consumption and unnecessary waste of resources11
6365688136Sustainability revolutionMajor cultural change in which people learn how to reduce their ecological footprint and live more sustainably12
6365688137Exponential growthGrowth in which some quantity increases at a constant rate per unit of time13
6365688138Planetary management worldviewWorldview holding that humans are separate from nature, that nature exist mainly to meet our needs and increasing once, and that we can use our ingenuity and technology to manage the life-support systems, mostly for our benefit14
6365688139Stewardship worldviewWorldview holding that we can manage the earth for a benefit but that we have an ethical responsibility to be caring and responsible managers or stewards of the earth15
6365688140Environmental wisdom worldviewWorldview holding that humans are part of and totally dependent on nature in that nature exist for all species not just us16
6365688141Natural incomeRenewable resources such as plants, animals, and soil provided by natural capital17
6365688142Tentative science (frontier science)Preliminary scientific data, hypothesis, and models that have not been widely tested and excepted18
6365688143Reliable scienceConcepts and ideas that are widely excepted by experts in a particular field of the science or social sciences19
6365688144IsotopesTwo or more forms of a chemical element that have the same number of protons but different mass numbers because they have different numbers of neutrons in their nuclei20
6365688145AcidityChemical charactistics that help determine how a substance dissolved in water will interact with and affect its environment21
6365688146Chemical change (reaction)Interaction between chemicals in which the chemical composition of the elements or compounds involved changes22
6365688147Electromagnetic radiationForms of kinetic energy traveling as electromagnetic waves23
6365688148First law of thermodynamicsWhenever 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 another24
6365688149Second law of thermodynamicsWhenever energy is converted from one form to another in a physical or chemical change, we end up with lower dash quality, more disbursed, less useful energy, usually low-temperature heat that flows into the environment25
6365688150Tipping pointThreshold level at which an environmental problem causes a fundamental and irreversible shift in the behavior of a system26
6365688151TroposphereInnermost layer of the atmosphere27
6365688152StratosphereSecond layer of the atmosphere28
6365688153Net primary productivityRate at which all the plants in an ecosystem produce net useful chemical energy29
6365688155Phosphorus cycleSpecies that play roles affecting many other organisms in an ecosystem30
6365688156Keystone speciesSpecies who is decline serves as early warnings that a community or ecosystem is being degraded31
6365688157Indicator speciesSpecies that normally live and thrive in a particular ecosystem32
6365688158Native speciesSpecies that migrate into an ecosystem or deliberately or accidentally introduced into an ecosystem by humans33
6365688159Nonnative speciesSpecies that migrate into an ecosystem or deliberately or accidentally introduced into an ecosystem by humans34
6365688160Resource partitioningProcess of dividing up resources in an ecosystem set species with similar needs use the same scarce resources at different times, in different ways, or in different places35
6365688161CoevolutionEvolution in which two or more species interact and exert selective pressures on each other that can lead to each species to undergo adaptation36
6365688162ParasitismInteraction between species in which one organism, called the parasite, praise on another organism, called the host, by living on or in the host37
6365688163MutualismType of species interaction in which both participating species generally benefit38
6365688164CommensalismAn interaction between organisms of different species that and which one type of organism benefits and the other type is neither helped nor harmed to any great degree39
6365688165Inertia (persistence)Ability of a living system such as a grassland or forced to survive moderate disturbances40
6365688166ResilienceAbility of a living system such as the forest or pond to be restored through secondary ecological succession after severe disturbance41
6365688167Range of toleranceRange of chemical in physical conditions that must be maintained for populations of a particular species to stay alive and grow, develop, and function normally42
6365688168Limiting factor principleToo much or too little of any abiotic factor can limit or prevent growth of a population of a species in an ecosystem him, even if all the other factors are at or near the optimal range of tolerance for the species43
6365688169Environmental resistanceAll of the limiting factor is the active gather to limit the growth of a population44
6365688170Cultural carrying capacityThe limit on population growth that would allow most people in an area or the world to live in reasonable comfort and freedom without impairing the ability of the planet to sustain future generations45
6365688171Fertility rateNumber of children born to an average woman in a population during her lifetime46
6365688172Crude birth rateAnnual number of live births per 1000 people in the population of a geographic area at the midpoint of a given year47
6365688173Crude death rateAnnual number of deaths per 1000 people in the population of a geographic area at the midpoint of a given year48
6365688174Expanding rapidly (age structure)49
6365688175Expanding slowly (age structure)50
6365688176Stable (age structure)51
6365688177Declining (age structure)52
6365688178PreindustrialPopulation grows very slowly because of the high birth rate (to compensate for high infant mortality rate) and a high death rate.53
6365688179TransitionalPopulation grows rapidly because birth rates are high and death rate drop because of improved food production and health.54
6365688180IndustrialPopulation growth slows as both birth and death rates drop because of improved food production, health, and education.55
6365688181PostindustrialPopulation growth levels off and then declines as birthrates equal and then fall below death rates.56
6365688182Rain shadow effectLow precipitation on the Leeward side of a mountain when prevailing winds floor up and over a high mountain or range of high mountains, creating semi arid and aired conditions on the Leeward side of a high mountain range57
6365688183Plankton58
6365688184Nekton59
6365688185Benthos60
6365688186Decomposers61
6365688187Turbidity62
6365688188Estuary63
6365688189Ocean acidification64
6365688190Watershed (drainage basin)65
6365688191Oligotrophic lake66
6365688192Eutrophic lake67
6365688193Cultural eutrophication68
6365688194Mesotrophic lake69
6365688195Biological extinction70
6365688196Background extinction rate71
6365688197HIPPCOHabitat destruction, degradation, and fragmentation; Invasive species; Population growth and increasing use of resources; Pollution; Climate change; Overexploitation72
6365688198Habitat fragmentation73
6365688199Precautionary principle74
6365688200Rangelands75
6365688201Biodiversity hotspots76
6365688202Ecological restoration77
6365688203Chronic undernutrition (hunger)78
6365688204Chronic malnutrition79
6365688205Industrialized agriculture80
6365688206Traditional subsistence agriculture81
6365688207Traditional intensive agriculture82
6365688208Polyculture83
6365688209Organic agriculture84
6365688210Green revolution85
6365688211Soil erosion86
6365688212Desertification87
6365688213Waterlogging88
6365688214Agrobiodiversity89
6365688215Integrated pest management90
6365688216Soil conservation91
6365688217Asthenosphere92
6365688218Sedimentary rock93
6365688219Igneous rock94
6365688220Metamorphic rock95
6365688221Overburden96
6365688222Spoils97
6365688364Open-pit mining98
6365688365Strip mining99
6365688366Area strip mining100
6365688367Contour strip mining101
6365688368Surface mining102
6365688369Mountaintop removal103
6365688370Subsurface mining104
6365688371Tailings105
6365688372Crude oil (petroleum)106
6365688373Peak production107
6365688374Refining108
6365688375Petrochemicals109
6365688376Tar sands (oil sands)110
6365688377Liquefied petroleum gas (LPG)111
6365688378Liquefied natural gas (LNG)112
6365688379Synthetic natural gas (SNG)113
6365688380Nuclear fuel cycle114

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