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APES Semester HHS Flashcards

Material that can help you prepare for the winter final exam in APES.

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5704128554CERCLA (Superfund)this law created a tax on the chemical and petroleum industries and provided broad Federal authority to respond directly to releases or threatened releases of hazardous substances that may endanger public health or the environment. Pays for clean up ($ from taxes)0
5704128555CoevolutionEvolution in which two or more species interact and exert selective pressures on each other that can lead each species to undergo adaptations. One species can lead to changes in the gene pool of another species. (plants and insects)1
5704128556Cogenerationproduction of two useful forms of energy, such as high- temperature heat or steam and electricity, from the same fuel source. (increase efficiency)2
5704128557convergent evolutionthe development of similar structures in organisms that do not share recent common ancestors. (unrelated relationship) dolphin and sharks3
5704128558Decomposition/ decomposerorganism that digests parts of dead organisms and cast-off fragments and wastes of living organisms by breaking down the complex organic molecules in those materials into simpler inorganic compounds and then absorbing the soluble nutrients. Decomposers consist of various bacteria and fungi. Complex simple4
5704128559Denitrificationwhen nitrogen leaves the soil as specialized bacteria in waterlogged soil and in the bottom sediments of lakes, oceans, and swamps convert NH3 to NH4 back into nitrite and nitrate ions and then into nitrogen gas (N2) and nitrous oxide gas N2O. These gases are released into the atmosphere to begin the nitrogen cycle. (75)5
5704128560detritus feederOrganisms that extracts nutrients from fragments of dead organisms and their cast-off parts and organic wastes. Eat dead things on the ground. Not considered Decomposers6
5704128561DetritusParts of dead organisms and cast-off fragments and wastes of living organisms.7
5704128562divergent evolutionis the accumulation of differences between groups which can lead to the formation of new species, usually a result of diffusion of the same species to different and isolated environments which blocks the gene flow among the distinct populations allowing differentiated fixation of characteristics through genetic drift and natural selection. 2 Species split. SPECIATION8
5704128563EcosystemA community where populations of different species interact with one another and with their nonliving environment of matter and energy. Biological and Physical Environment Living= biotic + Nonliving= abiotic9
5704128564Eutrophication-natural and culturalPhysical, chemical, and biological changes that take place after a lake or estuary receives inputs of plant nutrients- mostly nitrates and phosphates- from natural erosions and runoff from surrounding land basins.10
5704128565Eutrophication leads to HYPOXIAGreening of a lake caused by fertilizer runoff. Algae dies, the bacteria spreads and soaks up all the oxygen which kills the fish and creates dead zones.11
5704128566Cultural Eutrophicationhuman inputs of nutrients from the atmosphere and from nearby urban and agricultural areas can accelerate the eutrophication of lakes.12
5704128567Floodplainflat valley floor next to a stream channel. For legal purposes, the term often applies to any low area that has the potential for flooding, including certain costal areas. They are good farming because its very fertile land. Its constantly replenished with fresh slit washed down in a flood. SILT13
5704128568Gross primary productivity(GPP) rate at which an ecosystem's producers capture and store a given amount of chemical energy as biomass in a given length of time. Total energy plant stores14
5704128569Net Primary ProductivityNet amount of primary production after cost of plant respieration is included. GPP-R= NPP15
5704128570Gene poolsum total of all genes found in the individuals of the population of a particular species.16
5704128571Gasificationthe heating and partial combustion of coal to release volatile gases, such as methane and carbon monoxide; after pollutants are washed out, these gases become efficient, clean-burning fuel. Makes fuel portable. Gas from coal17
5704128572Hydrogen sulfide, H2SCommon chemical found in fluids of hydrothermal vents. When seawater is exposed to the sulfate in volcanic rock below the ocean floor, hydrogen sulfide is formed.18
5704128573James Bay, QuebecBay that transports water. 16,000 megawatss of hydroelectricity. Dam works to generate electricity. Not a tall dam19
5704128574K strategists-fewer and larger offspring; - High parental care and protection of offspring; - later reproduction age; - most offspring lives to reproduce; - larger adults; - adapted to stable climate/environmental conditions; - lower population growth rate(r) ; - pop size is stable and close to carrying capacity; -specialist niche; - high ability to compete; - late successional species;20
5704128575R strategistsMany small offspring; - little t no parenting/ protection; - early reproductive age; - most offspring don't live to reproduce; - small adults; adapted to unstable climate/environment ; Higher population growth rate(r) ; pop. Size changes above/below c.c; - generalist niche; - low ability to compete; - early successional species;21
5704128576Kissimmee River, Floridathe physical effects of channelization, including alteration of the system's hydrologic characteristics, largely eliminated river and floodplain wetlands and degraded fish and wildlife values of the Kissimmee River ecosystem. Restoration project that is part of the everglades22
5704128577limiting factortoo much or too little of any abiotic factor can limit or prevent growth of a population, even if all other factors are at or near the optimum range or tolerance. This is how population is controlled.23
5704128578Lithosphereis made up of two parts the crust and the mantle(upper and lower mantle). It contains nonrenewable fossil fuels and minerals we use as well as renewable soil chemicals needed for plant life24
5704128579Methane, CH4a naturally occurring gas, which is associated with decomposition and with oil deposits. It is a greenhouse gas and burning it, or releasing it to the atmosphere will lead to the creation of carbon dioxide. Burning= CO2. Byproduct of decomposition25
5704128581mitigation bankingreduces greenhouse gas emissions to slow down the rate of temperature increase and buy time to learn more about how the earth's climate system works and to shift to other non-carbon energy options. Companies use it to make artificial wetlands26
5704128582Mono Lake, Californiadesert lake with an unusually productive ecosystem, based on brine shrimp that grow in the lake, and critical nesting habitat for two million migratory birds that feed on the shrimp. Similar to Aral Sea. Deprived of water27
5704128583NAFTANorth Atlantic Free Trade Agreement28
5704128584Net primary productivitythe rate at which producers use photosynthesis to store energy minus the rate at which they use some of this stored energy through aerobic respiration. Net energy left after plants burn energy29
5704128585Nicheway of life for a species30
5704128586Generalist nichewide niches Generalist species tolerate a wide range of conditions31
5704128587Specialist nichenarrow niche specialist species can only tolerate a narrow range of conditions32
5704128588Fundamental nichethe fully potential range of physical, chemical, and biological conditions and resources a species could theoretically use. (everything)33
5704128589Realized nicheto survive and avoid competition, a species usually occupies only part of its fundamental34
5704128590niche.what actually happens- how an organism lives35
5704128591NitrificationHappens when ammonia not taken up by plants may undergo nitrification. Two step process. is the biological oxidation of ammonia with oxygen into nitrite followed by the oxidation of these nitrites into nitrates. Chemical process36
5704128592Nitrogen dioxide, NO2is the chemical compound with the formula NO237
5704128593Nitrogen fixationconversion of atmospheric nitrogen gas into forms useful to plants by lightning, bacteria, and cyanobacteria; it is part of the nitrogen cycle. Nitrogen becomes ammonia38
5704128594Nitrogen, N2Nitrogen occurs in all living organisms, and the nitrogen cycle describes movement of the element from air into the biosphere and organic compounds, then back into the atmosphere. Synthetically-produced nitrates are key ingredients of industrial fertilizers, and also key pollutants in causing the eutrophication of water systems. 78% of earth39
5704128595PhotosynthesisComplex process that takes place in cells of green plants. Radiant energy from the sun is used to combine CO2 and H2O to produce O2 and carbohydrates such as glucose (C6H12O6) and other nutrient molecules40
5704128596PopulationGroup of individual organisms of the same species living in a particular area41
5704128597primary successionecological succession in a bare area that has never been occupied by a community of organisms.42
5704128598Secondary successionecological succession in an area in which natural vegetation has been removed or destroyed but the soil is not destroyed.43
5704128599Reclamation of mine land includesrestoring land, bringing in new top soil, grading/smoothing land, phytoremediation. (the glen)44
5704128600Remediationthe action of remedying something, especially the reversal or stopping of damage to the environment.45
5704128601Restoration ecologyRestoration ecology practice of renewing and restoring degraded, damaged, or destroyed ecosystems and habitats in the environment by active human intervention and action, within a short time frame46
5704128602ScavengerOrganism that feeds on dead organisms that were killed by other organisms or died naturally. Example47
5704128603SpeciesGroup of organisms that resemble one another in appearance, behavior, chemical makeup and processes, and genetic structure. Organisms that reproduce sexually are classified as members of the same species only if they can actually or potentially interbreed with one another and produce fertile offspring.48
5704128604Species richnessnumber of different species contained in a community.49
5704128605Sustainabilityability of earth's various systems, including human cultural systems and economies, to survive and adapt to changing environmental conditions indefinitely.50
5704128608The Clean Air Act of 1972one of a number of pieces of legislation relating to the reduction of smog and air pollution in general. The use by governments to enforce clean air standards has contributed to an improvement in human health and longer life spans.51
5704128609The Montreal Protocol 1987 amended in 1990 and 1992CFCs or is an international treaty designed to protect the ozone layer by phasing out the production of numerous substances believed to be responsible for ozone depletion.52
5704128610Three Mile Island, Pennsylvaniathe nuclear power plant widely known for having been the site of the most significant accident in United States commercial nuclear energy, on March 28, 1979, when TMI-2 suffered a partial meltdown.53
5704128611Toleranceminimum and maximum limits for physical conditions and concentrations of chemical substances beyond which no members of a particular species can survive.54
5704128612TranspirationProcess in which water is absorbed by the root systems of plants, moves up through the plants, passes through pores in their leaves or other parts, and evaporates into the atmosphere as water vapor.55
5704128613trophic levelall organisms that are the same number of energy transfers away from the original source of energy that enter an ecosystem. 1st level= all producers 2nd level= all herbivores56
5704128614Symbiotic relationshipsnecessary for the survival of at least one of the organisms involved; associations in which one organism lives on another or where one partner lives inside the other.57
5704128615Keystone speciescontrol interactions in a community (species and numbers). Regulates what happens and if this species is lost the whole population changes.58
5704128616Foundation speciescontrol/create habitat. Elephants knock down tress to make a habitat.59
5704128617Indicator speciesbright species, 1st to disappear/damage (Bees)60
5704128618Non-native speciesOriginally come from outside, migrate or introduced61
5704128619Native speciesOriginal, always been there62
5704128620Generalists speciesBroad niches63
5704128621Specialists speciesnarrow niches64
5704128622Predatorkills others65
5704128623efficiencies of an average coal-fired power plant30-35% =efficiency of coal66
5704128624What is CITES?-Convention on International trade in endangered species of wild fauna and flora an international agreement between the government aim control international trade of wild animals to make sure it doesn't endanger the it works67
5704128625CITES Appendix 1Animals close to extinction. nearly all trade of these animals is illegal (pandas)68
5704128626CITES Appendix 2Includes species not necessarily threatened with extinction, but locally rare.69
5704128627Migratory Bird Act of 1918USA entered into agreements with 4 other nations(Canada, Mexico, Japan, and Russia)This law makes it illegal to hunt, kill, sell birds that are migratory Can't take any of the bird's feathers or nests70
5704128628Lacey Act of 1900US law prohibits the transport of illegally captured animals across state lines -1st federal law protecting wildlife today its expanded to prevent the import of nonnatives71
5704128629Habitat FragmentationHappens when one large continuous area of habitat is reduced in area and , species into smaller/isolated groups that divided into smaller more scattered, and isolated. This leads to diversity because it divides.72
5704128630Biogeographyis the study of the distribution of species. Spatially and temporarily.73
5704128631Island geography-large islands= more species and -further away from main land= less diverse74
5704128632Intrinsic valuesaesthetics, see wildlife75
5704128633Extrinsic valuessell/calculate ($)76
5704128634What characteristics make species prone to extinction?-low reproductive rate (k)- specialized niche -narrow distribution- feeds at high trophic level -fixed migratory patterns-rare -commercially valuable-large territories77
5704128635.Local extinctionwhen a species is no longer found in an area it once inhabited but is still found elsewhere in the world.78
5704128636Ecological ExtinctionWhen so few members of a species are let that it can no longer play its ecological role in the biological communities where it is found.79
5704128637Background Extinctionnormal extinction of various species as a result of changes in local environmental conditions80
5704128638Mass ExtinctionA catastrophic, widespread often global event in which major groups of species are wiped out over a short time compared with normal (background extinction).81
5704128639Biological evolution depends onMust have enough genetic VARIABILITY for a trait to exist; The trait must be HERITABLE; Trait must lead to DIFFERENTIAL REPRODUCTION. It must enable individuals with the trait to leave more offspring than other members of the population.82
5704128641MantleZone of the earth's interior between its core and its crust. most of it is solid rock Iron & Nickel - under its rigid outer part is the Asthenosphere - hot, partly melted pliable rock that flows and can be deformed like sot plastic83
5704128642Coreinner zone of the earth. -extremely hot Hot iron radioactive - solid inner core liquid outer core84
5704128643LithosphereOuter shell of the earth composed of crust rock and materials - rigid, most outer part of the mantle outside the asthenosphere- or material found in the earth's plates85
5704128644Where do we use bauxite for?In the development of aluminum burned or melted -aluminum process= expensive- recycle aluminum saves 98% of energy86
5704128645Where are methyl anhydrates found?frozen rock found in deep sea - expensive and hard to get87
5704128650Global warmingWarming of the earth's atmosphere because of increases in the concentrations of one or more greenhouse gases primarily as a result of human activities, melts glaciers, raises ocean levels,88
5704128651thermal expansion of oceans does what?also raised ocean levels89
5704128652Greenhouse effectnatural effect that releases heat in the atmosphere (troposphere) near the earth's surface.90
5704128653Greenhouse ChemicalsWater vapor, carbon dioxide, ozone, and other gases in the lower atmosphere (troposphere) absorb some of infrared radiation (heat) radiated by the earth's surface.91
5704128654What processes remove/add CO2 to the earth's atmosphere?Remove CO2 by growing plants, growing trees, dissolving CO2 in water Add burn things, drive cars, breathing92
5704128658How does one explain the fluctuation of CO2 in the atmosphere on a yearly basis? -deforestation-clearing grasslands-burning fossil fuels93
5704128659What causes the seasons?as earth makes its annual revolution around the sun on an axis tilted about 23.5, various regions are tipped toward or away from the sun. the resulting variations in the amount of solar energy reaching the earth create the seasons in the north and south hemispheres.94
5704128660Coriollis effectspinning of earth. Air isn't connected to earth so it gets pulled. Because of this effect the earth's rotation deflects the movement of the air over different parts of the earth distributing heat and moisture in the troposphere.95
5704128661Leachingproves in which various chemicals in upper layers of soil are dissolved and carried to lower layers and, in some cases, to groundwater.96
5704128662Soil horizionhorizontal zones that make up a particular mature soil. Each horizon has a distinct texture and composition that vary with different types of soil.97
5704128663O horizonthe top layer, surface litter layer, it consists of freshly fallen undecomposed or partially decomposed leaves, twigs, crop wastes, animal waste, fungi, and other organic materials. Brown or black in color.98
5704128664A horizontop soil layer, is a porous mixture of the partially decomposed bodies of dead plants/animals called "humus" and inorganic materials such as clay, silt, and sand. Very fertile soil that produces high crop yields.99
5704128665B/C horizonB(subsoil) and C(parent material) contains most of a soil's inorganic matter, mostly broken down rock consisting of varying mixtures of sand, slit, clay, and gravel much of it transported by water from "a horizon". The "c horizon" lies on a base of unweathered parent material normally bedrock.100
5704128666Carbon cyclecyclic movement of carbon in different chemical forms from the environment chemical forms from the environment to organisms and then back to the environment101
5704128667nitrogen cyclecyclic movement of nitrogen in organisms and back to the environment.102
5704128668Water cyclecollects, purifies, distributes, and recycles the earth's fixed supply of water. Powered by energy from the sun that evaporates water into the atmosphere that comes back to earth because of gravity.103
5704128669Sulfur cyclecyclic movement of sulfur in various Chemical forms from the environment to organisms and back to the environment104
5704128670Rock cyclethe interaction of physical and chemical processes that changes rocks from one type to.another105
5704128671Rank the following in commercial energy production(high to low)Oil, gas, coal, solar, biomass106
5704128672carrying capacitythe maximum population of a given species that a particular habitat can sustain without degrading the habitat.107

AP Euro Enlightenment in Europe Flashcards

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5604090804VoltaireHe never stopped fighting for tolerance, reason, freedom of religion, and freedom of speech. This philosophe's masterful use of satire got him into frequent trouble with the clergy, the aristocracy, and the government of France.0
5604090805Charles de MontesquieuBelieved that the separation of powers would keep a society in balance. Invented checks and balances His two ideas became the basis of the US constitution. France, US, Latin Americans use them in new constitution1
5604090806RousseauHe was incredibly passionate about individual freedom. He believed in direct democracy. Argued that all people are equal and that titles of nobility should be abolished. He also had very specific ideas on education, and the place of women in society. His ideas inspired French into overthrowing their monarch.2
5604090807Cesare BeccariaHis idea was the abolishment of torture and capital punishment. He believed laws existed to preserve social order, not to avenge crimes. His ideas affected criminal law firm in Europe and in the US.3
5604090808Mary WollstonecraftArgued that women, like men, need education to become virtuous and useful. She urged women to enter male dominated fields of medicine and politics. Her ideas caused a women's rights group to form in Europe and in North America.4
5604090809Jean Jacques RousseauDisagreed with most other philosophes who believed that reason, science, and art improve the lives of all people, and instead argued that civilization corrupts people's natural goodness.5
5604090810John LockeThis political thinker felt that people are reasonable beings. He supported self-government and argued that the purpose of government is to protect the natural rights of people. If government fails to protect these natural rights, the citizens will have the right to overthrow it.6
5604090811Thomas HobbesThis political thinker believed that all humans are naturally selfish and wicked. He argued, therefore, that strong governments are necessary to control human behaviour. To avoid chaos, he said, people enter into a social contract. They give up their rights in exchange for law and order.7
5604090812The EnlightenmentThe new intellectual movement that stressed reason and thought and the power of the individual to solve problems was the________8
5604090813social contractThe willingness of people to hand over their rights to a ruler in exchange for law and order in society was called the _________9
5604090814John LockeThe philosopher who believed that all people are born free and equal, with the rights to life, liberty, and property was _________10
5604090815VoltaireBrilliant French satirist who frequently targeted the clergy, the aristocracy, and the government was _______11
5604090816MontesquieuAn influential French writer who wrote that "Power should be a check to power" was ________12
5604090817direct democracyFrench philosophe Jean Jacques Rousseau believed that the best form of government would be a _______13
5604090818philosophesThinkers of the Enlightenment; Wanted to educate the socially elite, but not the masses; were not allowed to openly criticize church or state, so used satire and double-meaning in their writings to avoid being banned; Salons held by wealthy women also kept philosophes safe; They considered themselves part of an intellectual community, and wrote back and forth to each other to share ideas.14
5604090819Salonsgatherings in which intellectual and political ideas were exchanged during the Enlightenment15
5604090820Thomas PainePeople have the natural right to rule themselves because they are capable of using their powers of reason to understand their world16
5604090821Candide Letters Concerning the English Nation Treatise on Toleration The Philosophical DictionaryWorks of Voltaire17
5604090822EncyclopediaWork pioneered by Denis Diderot18
5604090823Vindication of the Rights of WomenWork by Mary Wollstonecraft19
5604090824What is Enlightenment?Work by Immanuel Kant20
5604090825Common SenseBooklet by Thomas Paine21
5604090826Social Contract Emile or On EducationWorks of Rousseau22
5604090827On Crimes and PunishmentsCesare Beccaria23
5604090828Wealth of NationsAdam Smith24
5604090829Frederick the GreatKing of Prussia 1740 - 1786 *military victories *reorganization of Prussian armies *patronage of the arts and the Enlightenment in Prussia25
5604090830Catherine the GreatRussian Tsar who ruled after the death of her husband Peter III and Patronized the Enlightenment Philosophes despite making few reforms based on enlightenment principles.26
5604090831Joseph II of AustriaMost Radical and Least Effective of the Enlightened Despots27
5604090832Enlightened Absolutistsmonarchs inspired by the enlightenment who embrace rationality. Most enlightened monarchs fostered education and allowed religious tolerance, freedom of speech, and the right to hold private property to their subjects.28
5604090833DiesmNatural Religion, the idea that god created a rational universe based on natural law and does not intervene.29
5604090834Newtonianismthe philosophical principle of applying Newton's methods in a variety of fields (helped lead to the enlightenment)30

AP Econ Flashcards

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8557063009ScarcityLimited resources and unlimited wants0
8557063010Trade-offGiving up one thing for another1
8557063011Opportunity Costwhatever must be given up to obtain some item; next best option2
8557063012Factors of ProductionLand (natural resources), Labor (work done to produce goods/services), Capital (tools/machinery), Entrepreneurship (someone who combines all factors to make a profit)3
8557063013Constant Opportunity CostResources are easily adaptable for producing either good (straight line)4
8557063014Increasing Opportunity CostOne factor increasing while the other decreases (bowed)5
8557063015Absolute Advantagethe ability to produce a specific product more efficiently than any other nation (the best)6
8557063016Comparative Advantagethe ability to produce a good at a lower opportunity cost than another producer (not so bad at)7
8557063017Economicsthe study of how society manages its scarce resources8
8557063018Efficiencythe property of society getting the most it can from its scarce resources9
8557063019Equalitythe property of distributing economic prosperity uniformly among the members of society10
8557063020Rational Peoplesystematically and purposefully do the best they can to achieve their objectives11
8557063021Marginal Changea small incremental adjustment to a plan of action12
8557063022Circular Flow Diagrama visual model of the economy that shows how dollars flow through markets among households and firms13
8557063023Production Possibilities Frontier (PPF)Graph that shows the combinations of outputs an economy can produce given the available factors of production and the available production technology14
8668714731Another term for marginalAdditional15
8668714732Input problemOther goes under16
8668714733Output problemsOther goes over17

AP Physics Review Flashcards

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5854323648240Find the horizontal distance traveled in the air.0
5854340315250Find the horizontal distance traveled in the air.1
5854340316320Find the horizontal distance traveled in the air.2
585435137143.2The maximum vertical height reached.3
585435137219.2The maximum vertical height reached.4
585435137330The maximum vertical height reached.5

AP Flashcards

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7207684875KasaysayanNakakaapekto ang heograpikal na kalagayan sa kung paano naganap ang mga pangyayari sa kasaysayan0
7207684876Agham pampolitikaAng pagtatakda ng mga hangganang politikal1
7207684877SosyolohiyaSalik ng kapaligiran sa pagbuo at pagunlad ng mga pamayanan2
7207684878EkonomiksMahalagang salik ang likas na yaman3
720768487938th parallelAng naghati sa south at north korea4
7207684880ConstantinopoleAng dating Istanbul Turkey5
720768488112,756 kmDiyametro6
7207684882146.6 milyong kmDistansya mula sa araw7
720768488323 oras at 4 segundoTagal sa pagikot sa axis8
7207684884365.26 arawTagal ng pagikot sa araw9
720768488570-50 celsiusTemperatura sa ibabaw ng daigdig10
7207684886CrustPinakamanipis at pinakalabas na bahagi ng mundo11
7207684887MantleMakapal at mainit na layer12
7207684888CoreMay dalawang bahagi ito.13

AP Biology Review Flashcards

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6654810361Dehydrationconnecting monomers together by the removal of water0
6654810362Hydrolysisdisassembling polymers by the addition of water1
6654810363Disaccharidesglucose + glucose = maltose / glucose + fructose = sucrose / glucose + galactose = lactose2
6654810364PolysaccharidesPlants: starch (energy) and cellulose (structure) Animals: glycogen (energy) and chitin (structure)3
6654810365*Lipidshydrophobic (very non-polar), consist of long hydrocarbon chains4
6654810366Fatsconsist of glycerol and 3 fatty acids, store long term energy, saturated = no double bond in hydrocarbon tails (no kink), unsaturated = double bond (kink)5
6654810367Phospholipidsconsist of phosphate head, glycerol, and 2 fatty acid tails, tail is hydrophobic, head is hydrophillic6
6654810368Protein structure and organizationcomposed of an amino group, a carboxyl group, hydrogen, and an R group, joined by peptide bonds and folded numerous times; 1) Primary (linear sequence) 2) Secondary (helix or pleat) 3) Tertiary 4) Quaternary (globular)7
6654810369Protein functions (8)1) enzymes 2) antibodies 3) storage proteins 4) transport proteins 5) hormones 6) receptor proteins 7) motor proteins 8) structural proteins8
6654810370*Nucleic AcidsDNA (A+T, G+C) carries genetic info, RNA (A+U, G+C) manufactures proteins9
6654810371Nuclear Envelopedouble membrane enclosing the nucleus (where genetic info is stored) perforated with pores, continuous with ER10
6654810372Chromatinuncondensed DNA that forms chromosomes during cell division11
6654810373Nucleolusnonmembranous structure involved in production of ribosomes, a nucleus has one or more of these12
6654810374Rough ERcovered in ribosomes, secretes and transports proteins produced by ribosomes13
6654810375Smooth ERmetabollic processes (synthesis of lipids, metabolism of carbs, detoxification of drugs and poisons)14
6654810376Golgistores, transports, and secretes cell products15
6654810377Cytoskeletonsupports cell, maintains its shape, aids in movement of cell products16
6654810378Centrosomes (2 centrioles)only in animal cells, microtubules used for cell division17
6654810379Lysosomesonly in animal cells, digestive organelles18
6654810380Flagellaonly in animal cells, cluster of microtubules for motility19
6654810381Extracellular Matrixonly in animal cells, made of proteins that provide support for cells and relay information for communication between the environment and the cell20
6654810382Central Vacuoleonly in plant cells, stores water and sugar, breaks down waste, and used as a mechanism for plant growth (when it swells)21
6654810383Prokaryotic vs. Eukaryoticnucleoid / nucleus; only ribosomes / complex membrane-bound organelles; both have same genetic coding, sugars, and amino acids22
6654810384Phospholipid Bilayertails of phospholipids are loosely packed and are in constant motion; membrane contains integral and peripheral proteins, cholestrol, and glycopreotins and glycolipids; cholesterol makes the membrane less permeable to water and other substances; non-polar and small polar molecules can pass through unadied23
6654810385Passive trasportmovement of molecules without requirement of energy: 1) diffusion 2) osmosis (across a membrane) 3) facilitated diffusion (helped by transport proteins)24
6654810386Active transportmovement of molecules that requires energy: 1) sodium-potassium pumps 2) exocytosis 3) endocytosis (phagocytosis, pinocytosis)25
6654810387Membrane Potentialvoltage across a membrane due to difference in positive and negative ions, electrons move from high to low concentration (ex. sodium-potassium pumps in neurons)26
6654810388Electrochemical Gradientdiffusion gradient resulting in combination of membrane potential and concentration gradient27
6654810389Hypertonicsolution with higher concentration of solutes, animal/plant cell in this solution would become shiveled/plasmolyzed28
6654810390Hypotonicsolution with lower concentration of solutes, animal/plant cell in this solution would lyse/become turgid29
6654810391Isotonicequal levels of solute concentration, plant cell in this solution would become flaccid30
6654810392When ΔG is negative......the reaction is exergonic (loss of free energy).31
6654810393When ΔG is positive......the reaction is endergonic (gain of free energy).32
6654810394*Enzymesproteins that are biological catalysts, lower the activation energy required to start a chemical reaction (reactants at unstable transition state) can be used over and over33
6654810395Substratethe substance that an enzyme acts upon34
6654810396Active Siteregion of enzyme that binds to the substrate35
6654810397Induced fitchange in the shape of an enzyme's active site induced by the substrate, helps to break down the substrate36
6654810398The higher the substrate concentration......the faster the reaction until the enzyme becomes saturated.37
6654810399Denaturationthe unraveling of an enzyme due to high temperatures or incompatible pH38
6654810400Cofactorsnonprotein molecules that are required for proper enzyme function, cofactors made of organic molecules are called coenzymes39
6654810401Enzyme inhibition may be irreversible if......the inhibitor attaches by covalent bonds (poisons, toxins)40
6654810402Competitive Inhibitorsresemble a substrate and block enzymes' active sites, can be overcome with higher concentration of substrate41
6654810403Noncompetitive Inhibitorsbind to a portion of the enzyme and change the shape of the active site so that it cannot match with substrates, used for regulating metabolic reactions42
6654810404Feedback Inhibitionthe product of a metabolic pathway switches off the enzyme that created it earlier in the process43
6654810405Oxidationloss of electrons (OIL)44
6654810406Reductiongain of electrons (RIG)45
6654810407Oxidative PhosphorylationATP synthesis powered by redox reactions that transfer electrons to oxygen46
6654810408Electron AcceptorsCellular respiration: NAD+ and FAD (to NADH and FADH2) Photosynthesis: NADP+ (to NADPH)47
6654810409GlycolysisInput: glucose, 2 ATP Output: 2 pyruvic acid, 4 ATP (net 2), 2 NADH48
6654810410Conversion Reaction before Kreb'sInput: 2 pyruvate Output: 2 acetyl (w/ CoA), 2 NADH, 2 CO249
6654810411Krebs CycleInput: 2 acetyl ➝ citric acid Output: 2 ATP, 6 NADH, 2 FADH2, 4 CO2 (after 2 turns of the cycle)50
6654810412Electron Transport ChainInput: NADH, FADH2, O2 (to accept e-) Output: 34-38 ATP, H2O51
6654810413Alcohol FermentationInput: glucose, 2 ATP, 2 NADH Output: 2 NAD+, 2 ethanol, 2 CO2, 4 ATP (net 2)52
6654810414Lactic Acid FermentationInput: glucose, 2 ATP, 2 NADH Output: 2 NAD+, 2 lactate, 4 ATP (net 2)53
6654810415Photosynthetic Equation54
6654810416Chloroplast structureExciting chlorophyll: chlorophyll in thylakoids absorb light, which excites electrons to produce potential energy55
6654810417Light ReactionsInput: H2O (2 e-), light energy, NADP+ Output: O2, ATP, NADPH56
6654810418Calvin CycleInput: 6 CO2 (fixed to RuBP by Rubisco), ATP, NADPH Output: 2 G3P = 1 glucose57
6654810419Watson and Crickbuilt the first accurate 3D DNA model58
6654810420Leading Strand vs. Lagging Strandworks toward replication fork / works away from replication fork; both always move in the 5' ➝ 3' direction59
6654810421Steps of DNA Replication1) helicase separates the DNA strands 2) SSB proteins prevent DNA from reanneling 3) primase creates RNA primer 4) DNA polymerase extends DNA strand from the primer 5) DNA polymerase I (RNase H) removes the primers 6) ligase joins the okazaki fragments of the lagging strand60
66548104223 types of RNA1) mRNA messenger 2) tRNA transfer amino acids (20 kinds) 3) rRNA ribosomes61
6654810423Transcription1) Initiation: promoter site (TATA) is recognized 2) Elongation: RNA polymerase adds ribonucleotides in the 5' ➝ 3' direction 3) Termination: RNA strand separates, RNA polymerase recognizes termination sequence (AAUAAA)62
6654810424RNA processing/splicingsplicesomes remove introns and put together exons, 5' cap and PolyA tail are added63
6654810425Codon vs. Anticodoncodon = nucleotide sequence on mRNA anticodon = nucleotide sequence on tRNA64
6654810426Translation1) Initiation: 5' cap attaches to ribosome which accepts an initiator tRNA at the P site (*AUG will always be 1st codon) 2) Elongation: codon/anticodon recognition and formation of peptide bond between A site amino acid and P site amino acid chain 3) translocation of the ribosome down the mRNA strand 4) Termination: ribosome will recognize stop codon and release the protein65
6654810427DNA mutationsbase-pair substitution; insertion/deletion; frameshift: 1) missense = different protein 2) nonsense = codes for a stop signal prematurely 3) silent = no harmful change66
6654810428Prokaryotic cell divisionbinary fission: splits in 2, exact copies, quick and efficient with few mutations, but reduces amount of genetic variation67
6654810429Somatic cell vs. Gameteany body cell except gametes / reproductive cells (sperm, egg)68
6654810430Interphase(90% of cell's life) G1: 1st growth, normal metabolic activity (goes into G0 phase if it is not ready for next phase); S: synthesis, DNA replication; G2: 2nd growth, prepares for mitosis69
6654810431Mitosis1) Prophase: chromatin condenses into chromosomes, nucleus disappears 2) Metaphase: chromosomes line up at equator, kinetechore microtubules attach 3) Anaphase: sister chromatids move to opposite poles of the cell 4) Telophase and Cytokinesis: daughter cells separate, nucleus reforms, chromosomes decondense70
6654810432Cyclin-dependent Kinases (Cdks)a regulatory protein that depends upon the presence of cyclin to complete its function, MPF is a Cdk that triggers a cell's passage into the M phase71
6654810433Meiosis I1) Prophase I: homologous chromosomes pair up and synapsis occurs, crossing over segments of the chromosomes (chiasma) to create more genetic variation 2) Metaphase I: homologous chromosomes line up at the equator 3) Anaphase: homologous chromosomes move to opposite poles of the cell. 4) Telophase I...72
6654810434Meiosis IIProphase II - Telophase II act exactly like mitosis except that the resultant number of daughter cells is 4 instead of 2, each with their own unique combination of genetic information73
66548104354 mechanisms that contribute to genetic variation1) Mutation 2) Independent Assortment: homologous chromosomes align randomly on one side of the equator or another 3) Crossing Over 4) Random Fertilization: a zygote can be any combination of a sperm and egg (64 trillion different combinations in humans)74
6654810436Testcrossbreed a homozygous recessive individual with an individual with a dominant phenotype but an unknown genotype to determine whether or not the individual is homozygous or heterozygous75
6654810437Dyhybrid heterozygous cross ratio9:3:3:176
6654810438Incomplete Dominanceheterozygous offspring have an intermediate phenotype of the parents, 1:2:1 ratio (ex. pink flower from red and white flowers)77
6654810439Codominanceboth alleles manifest themselves separately in an organism's phenotype (ex. roan cattle)78
6654810440Multiple allelesa trait controlled by two or more alleles (ex. blood type, eye color)79
6654810441Blood TypesA: A antigen, B antibody B: B antigen, A antibody AB: A and B antigen, no antibodies (universal recipient) O: no antigens, A and B antibodies (universal donor)80
6654810442Polygenic Inheritancethe additive effect of 2 or more independently assorted genes on phenotype (ex. human skin pigment)81
6654810443Linked genes phenotypic ratiotwo large numbers (wild and mutant) and two much smaller numbers (recombinant phenotypes)82
6654810444Genetic Map (Linkage/Cytological Map)ordered list of the genetic loci along a particular chromosome, recombinant frequencies can be used to construct it (smaller the percentage = closer together)83
6654810445X Inactivationin females during embryonic development, one of the two X chromosomes in a cell becomes inactive (Barr body) (ex. calico cats)84
6654810446Nondisjucntionhomologous chromosomes fail to separate during meiosis I or II85
6654810447Aneuploidyone or more chromosomes are present in extra copies or are deficient in number; Trisomic = 3 copies instead of 2, Monosomic = 1 copy instead of 286
6654810448Polyploidywhen there is a whole extra set of chromosomes (ex. oversized fruits); Triploidy = 3 sets, Tetraploidy = 4 sets87
66548104494 alterations to gene structure1) Deletion: removal of chromosomal segment 2) Duplication: repetition of a segment 3) Inversion: reversal of a segment within a chromosome 4) Translocation: movement of a segment from one chromosome to another, non-homologous one88
66548104503 stages in cell cummunication1) Reception: cell detects a signal via connection of a ligand to a receptor protein 2) Transduction: the receptor protein converts the signal to a form that can cause a chemical response 3) Response: transduced signal triggers a specific cellular response89
6654810451Types of cell signaling (4)synaptic, paracrine, hormonal90
6654810452Examples of cell signalingG-protein coupled receptor, ligand-gated ion channels, steroid hormones (dissolved across plasma membrane, intracellular receptor)91
6654810453Second Messengers and Phosphorylation cascadesecond messengers and kinases spread throughout a cell that help amplify a cellular signal by a series of phosphorylation reactions (addition of phosphate)92
6654810454Virus structurenonliving, can't rproduce on their own; Capsid: protein coat that encloses the viral genome; Envelope: membrane that surrounds some viral capsids; Phage: protein encapsulated virus that attacks bacteria93
6654810455Lytic Cycle1) virus attaches to host cell 2) phage DNA enters cell and the cell's DNA degrades (*restriction enzymes in bacteria could destroy them) 3) synthesis of viral genomes and proteins 4) assembly of phages within cell 5) release of viruses, destroys cell94
6654810456Lysogenic Cyclethe virus inserts its DNA into a host cell, and its DNA integrates with the DNA of the host, allows it to be replicated without being attacked for long periods of time before entering the lytic cycle95
6654810457RetrovirusRNA virus that transcribes its RNA into DNA to insert into host cells (ex. HIV)96
6654810458Provirusa viral genome that is permanently inserted into a host genome97
6654810459Viral Transductioncontributes to bacterial genetic variation98
6654810460Repressible Operontrp operon - usually on, can be repressed. Repressor protein produced in inactive shape99
6654810461Inducible Operonlac operon - usually off, can be turned on. Repressor protein produced in active shape.100
6654810462cAMP and CAP regulated Operonwhen CAP is inactive, transcription continues at a much less efficient rate even in the presence of lactose101
6654810463Histone Acetylationthe loosening of chromatin structure (euchromatin), promotes transcription102
6654810464Histone Methylationthe condensing of chromatin structure (heterochromatin), prevents transcription103
6654810465Transcription Factors and EnhancersRNA polymerase requires the assistance of transcription factor proteins and enhancers or activators to successfully transcribe RNA104
6654810466Epigenetic Inheritanceinheritance of traits not directly related to nucleotide sequence (ex. fat, sickly, yellow rats were fed a methylated diet, resulted in offspring that were normal-sized, healthy, and brown)105
66548104675 Evidences for Evolution1) Biogeography 2) Fossil Record 3) Comparative Anatomy 4) Comparative Embryology 5) Molecular Biology106
66548104684 conditions for Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium (not evolving)1) very large population 2) isolation from other populations 3) no mutations 4) no natural selection107
6654810469Microevolution vs. Macroevolutionchange in the gene pool of a population over several generations / large scale changes in a population that leads to the evolution of a new species108
66548104704 causes of Microevolution1) genetic drift 2) gene flow 4) natural selection109
6654810471Genetic Driftrandom change in gene frequency of a small breeding population: 1) Founder Effect = small population of organisms colonizes a new area, 2) Bottleneck Effect = sudden decrease in population size due to disaster110
6654810472Gene Flowloss/addition of alleles from a population due to imigration/emigration111
6654810473Nonrandom Matingselection of mates for specific phenotypes: 1) Assortative Mating = when individuals select partners with simple phenotypic characters, 2) Inbreeding = more recessive traits likely to come together112
66548104743 Modes of Natural Selection1) Stabilizing: favors intermediate, 2) Directional: favors one extreme phenotype, 3) Diversifying: favors both extremes113
6654810475Heterozygote Advantageheterozygotes for a trait are more likely to survive (ex. carriers of sickle cell anemia are immune to malaria)114
6654810476Biological Species Conceptpopulation whose members can create viable, fertile offspring (Problems: doesn't apply to extinct animals or asexually reproducing organisms)115
6654810477Prezygotic Reproductive Barriers1) Habitat Isolation 2) Behavioral Isolation (differing behaviors for attracting mates) 3) Temporal Isolation (mate at different times) 4) Mechanical Isolation 5) Gametic Isolation (unable to fertilize egg)116
6654810478Postzygotic Reproductive Barriers1) Reduced Hybrid Viability (disruption in embryonic stage) 2) Reduced Hybrid Fertility 3) Hybrid Breakdown (F1 is fertile, F2 is sterile or weak)117
6654810479Allopatric Speciationwhen populations become geographically isolated from the rest of the species and has the potential to develop a new species (ex. Adaptive Radiation: many diversely adapted species from common ancestor, Darwin's finches)118
6654810480Sympatric Speciationmembers of a population develop gametic differences that prevent them from reproducing with the parental type (polyploidy, not as common)119
6654810481Punctuated Equilibrium vs. Gradualismevolution occurs in short spurts of rapid change / each new species will evolve gradually over long spans of time120
6654810482Convergent Evolutiondifferent organisms that occupy similar environments come to resemble one another (ex. dolphins and sharks)121
6654810483EndosymbiosisOrigin of mitochondria and chloroplasts. Evidence: They have their own DNA and ribosomes, double membrane structure, grow and reproduce on their own within the cell122
6654810484Phylogenyevolutionary history of a species or group of related species123
6654810485Taxonomic groups from broad to narrow (8)Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species124
66548104863 mechanisms in which bacteria transfer genetic materials1) Transformation: prokaryote takes up DNA from its environment 2) Transduction: viruses transfer genes between prokaryotes 3) Conjugation: genes are directly transferred from one prokaryote to another over a temporary "mating bridge"125
6654810487Types of Symbiotic RelationshipsMutualism (+, +), Commensalism (+, 0), Parasitism, (+, -)126
6654810488Factors that influence Transpiration RateTemperature: higher temperature, faster rate; Humidity: higher humidity, slower rate; Sunlight: more sun, faster rate; Wind: more wind, faster rate127
6654810489Lines of Immune Defense1st Line) skin oil and sweat, mucous; 2nd Line) nonspecific phagocytes and cytotoxic immune cells; 3rd Line) specific immune system128
6654810490Primary and Secondary Immune Response129
6654810491Active vs. Passive Immunitydepends on the response of a person's own immune system (artificial = vaccines) / immunity passed from one organism to another130
6654810492B cells vs. T cells (maturation)mature in bone marrow / mature in thymus131
6654810493Humoral vs. Cell-Mediated Immune Responses132
6654810494Non-steroid hormone vs. Steroid hormonetravels in bloodstream, binds to receptor on cell surface / travels in bloodstream, binds to receptor inside the cell133
6654810495Endotherms vs. Ectothermswarmed by heat generated by metabolism (mammals, birds) / generate little metabolic heat, warmed by environment134
6654810496Nichea position/role taken by a kind of organism within its community135
6654810497Resource Partitioningdivision of environmental resources by coexisting species136
6654810498Per capita Growth Ratebirth - death / total population137
6654810499Exponential vs. Logistic Growthin logistic growth, carrying capacity will limit the population's size138
6654810500Density-dependent RegulationDensity-independent: natural disasters, human impact, etc.139
6654810501Keystone Speciesspecies that exerts strong control on community structure not by numerical might but by their pivotal ecological roles or niches140
6654810502Energy Pyramideach energy level receives only 10% of the pervious level's energy141
6654810503Gross Primary Production vs. Net Primary Productiontotal amount of energy from light converted to chemical energy to organic molecules / GPP - energy used by primary producers for "autotrophic respiration"142
6654810504Carbon CycleConnect photosynthesis (fixation) to cellular respiration (CO2 release)143
6654810505Plasmidsa small, circular, double-stranded DNA molecule that carries accessory genes separate from those of a bacterial chromosome144
6654810506Recombinant DNAa DNA vector made in vitro with segments from different sources145
6654810507Restriction Enzymean enzyme that recognizes and cuts DNA molecules at specific nucleotide sequences (restriction sites), can then be used to create recombinant DNA146
6654810508Gel Electrophoresisanalyzing fragments of DNA (RFLPs) by their length and charge to determine genetic fingerprints and other genetic information147

AP Biology Photosynthesis Flashcards

Chapter 10 Vocabulary for AP Biology

Terms : Hide Images
9431990529ChlorophyllGreen Pigment Main photosynthetic pigmnet Absorbs primarily violet-blue and red wavelengths0
9431990530Thylakoidsdense interconnected membranous sacs where the light reactions occur1
9431990531Granastacks of thylakoid2
9431990532Granumsingular of grana3
9431990533Chloroplastsites of photosynthesis4
9431990534Photosynthesisconversion of light energy into chemical energy stored in sugar and other organic molecules5
9431990535Photosynthesis Equation6 CO2 + 6 H2O + light --> C6H12O6 + 6 O26
9431990536Carbon Dioxidesource of inorganic carbon used in photosynthesis7
9431990537Electromagnetic SpectrumElectromagnetic energy which travels in waves8
9431990538ColorsLight we see is reflected off objects and light we don't see is absorbed by objects9
9431990539WhiteAll colors reflected10
9431990540BlackAll colors absorbed11
9431990541Chlorophyll amain photosynthetic green pigment, absorbs primarily violet-blue and red wavelengths12
9431990542Pigmenta molecule that absorbs wavelengths in the visible light spectrum13
9431990543CarotenoidGroup of pigments that absorb blue and blue-green wavelengths, appear orange, yellow, and red14
9431990544Light ReactionsOccur in thylakoid membrane and are also called light dependent reactions15
9431990545PhotosystemConsists of a reaction-center complex surrounded by light-harvesting complexes which split water to create electrons that get transferred to NADP+ to create NADPH and H+ which are used to create ATP16
9431990546Light-Harvesting ComplexContains chlorophyll a, chlorophyll b, and carotenoids (within the photosystem) that will trap light energy for use in the light reactions17
9431990547Photosystem 1Has P700 chlorophyll a in reaction-center complex, thought to have evolved first because it can work alone to create primary acceptors, 2nd of the photosystems18
9431990548Photosystem 2Has P680 chlorophyll a in reaction-center complex, first of the photosystems. splits water into electrons, oxygen, and hydrogen ions19
9431990549CytochromeProtein in the electron transport chain of the photosystems that transfers the electrons to create NADPH20
9431990550Calvin CycleLight-Independent reactions Occurs in stoma, does not use light directly. Uses the enzyme Rubisco to create 2 molecules of G3P which is then either used to create glucose or recycled back into RuBP to restart the cycle21
9431990551RubiscoThe most abundant protein on Earth Carbon Fixation is catalyzed by Rubisco22
9431990552ReductionThe carbon molecules made in Carbon Fixation are reduced into to G3P by adding the negative phosphate from a NADPH that can be used to make glucose or perform other processes23
94319905531 Cycle of Calvin Cycle1 CO2 is fixed 3 ATP are used 2 NADPH are used 1 RuBP is regenerated 6 cycles needed to make 1 glucose molecule24
9431990554C4 PhotosynthesisA method that bypasses photorespiration Happens in corn, sugarcane, and other plants in hot, dry environments Converts carbon dioxide to a 4-carbon intermediary which is then stored in bundle-sheath cells25
9431990555C3 PlantPlants that use the Calvin Cycle without creating carbon intermediaries, take in carbon dioxide through stomata. An enzyme called RuBisCO helps the carbon dioxide combine to make sugar.26
9431990556chlorophyll bPigment that absorbs light in the blue and orange light spectrum. Second major pigment used in plants.27
9431990557CAM PlantsPlants that only open stomata at night. They convert carbon dioxide to malic acid which is then converted back into carbon dioxide during the day for the Calvin cycle28

ap Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
5952321898Nation-stateis one where the great majority are conscious of a common identity and share the same culture. Examples- Japan, North and South Korea.0
5952357943Statea nation or territory considered as an organized political community under one government. Examples- United Kingdom1
5952493995Federal Statessplits power between central authorities and local or regional governments2
5952499737Unitary Stateskeeps all power under the control of the central government3
5952535990Centripetal FroceThey provide stability, strengthen the state, help bind people together, and create solidarity.4
5952558004Centrifugal ForceIt is a force or attitude that tends to divide a state.5
5952619518Gerrymanderingmanipulate the boundaries of so as to favor one party or class.6
5952638220landlockedan interior country or state that is surrounded by land7
5952647001relict boundarya political boundary that has ceased to function but the imprint of which can still be detected on the cultural landscape8
5952769454superimposed boundarya political boundary placed by powerful outsiders on a developed human landscape9
5952800721Consequent Boundariesdrawn to accomodate existing religious, linguistic, ethnic, or economic differences between countries ~ Ex. Vatican City ~ Ex. Palestine ~ Ex. Pakistan ~ Ex. Yugoslavia10
5952840425imperialismcontrol of a territory already occupied11
5953123885Supranational OrganizationOrganization of three or more states to promote shared objectives.12
5953250529Devolutionthe process of declining from a higher to a lower level of effective power or vitality or essential quality13

AP Comparative Government: Nigeria Flashcards

AP Comparative Government Test Prep 2014.

Terms : Hide Images
5937306887Sani AbachaOppressive Nigerian military dictator from 1993-1998 who came to power through a military coup.0
5937306888Ibrahim BabangidaMilitary ruler of Nigeria from 1985-1993 who sought to establish the failed Third Republic.1
5937306889Derivation FormulaFormula for distributing percentage of oil revenues between national and local government in Nigeria.2
5937306890Federal Character PrincipleNigerian quota system designed to ease ethnic tension by requiring the president to appoint ministers and civil servants from each Nigerian state.3
5937306891First RepublicNigerian parliamentary regime that followed independence (1960-66)4
5937306892Fourth RepublicNigerian Parliamentary democratic regime (1999 to now)5
5937306893FulaniNorth, Muslim ethnic group6
5937306894HausaNorth, Muslim ethnic group7
5937306895House of RepresentativesLower house of National Assembly8
5937306896Igbo (IBO)South East, Christian, failed to secede9
5937306897Goodluck JonathanCurrent president10
5937306898MEND (Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta)Militant seperatist group from the Niger Delta.11
5937306899MOSOP (Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People)Ethnic association founded by Ken Saro-Wiwa to promote the interests of ethnic Ogoni in the Niger Delta.12
5937306900NEEDS (National Economic Empowerment and Development Strategy)Reform program to improve economy (stems government corruption and enhance economic infrastructure).13
5937306901Niger DeltaWorld's third largest wetland and source of Nigerian oil and economic and ethnic conflict.14
5937306902Olusegun ObasanjoMilitary ruler from 1976-1979 and two term elected president, from 1999-200715
5937306903PatrimonialismArrangement whereby a ruler depends on a collection of supporters within the state who will gain direct benefits in return for enforcing the ruler's will.16
5937306904People's Democratic PartyPolitical party that dominated Nigerian since it's 1998 formation; its base was originally the Hausa Muslims.17
5937306905Republic of BiafraIgbo-dominated Eastern Region that tried, and failed, to secede from Nigeria in 1967.18
5937306906Resource Curseonly one available resource to make money off from (oil) (natural resources take over the economy).19
5937306907Ken Saro-WiwaNoted Nigerian playwright and environmental activist, executed in 1995 for his defense of the land and peoples of the Niger Delta.20
5937306908Scramble for AfricaWhen all the Europeans wanted to have territory in Africa and drew lines on a map21
5937306909Second RepublicShort lived Nigerian democratic regime from 1979-1983, in which the former parliamentary system was replaced with a presidential regime.22
5937306910ShariaIslamic Law in North23
5937306911Third RepublicDemocratic regime proposed by General Ibrahim Babangida in 1993, but precluded by Abacha's military coup in the same year, following anulled elections24
5937306912Umaru Yar'AduaPresident before Jonathan25
5937306913YorubaSouth West, Christian, Muslim, Animist26
5937306914ZoningPDP idea to try to keep things fair between the north and south (every two terms the president has to come from a different location to keep the populated North from being really powerful, so a president who is a Northern Muslim can serve two terms, then the next president has to be a Southern Christian)27

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