Cycles and Systems
Land and Water Use
Energy Power Play
Pollutions and Toxins
Global Change
100

This is the only biogeochemical cycle that does not have a significant gaseous atmospheric phase.

Phosphorus Cycle

100

This term describes the unintended environmental or social cost of a product not included in its market price.

What is an Externality?

100

This is the most abundant and "dirtiest" fossil fuel, releasing high amounts of SO2 and mercury when burned.

What is Coal?

100

This secondary pollutant is formed when NOx, VOCs, and sunlight react in the atmosphere.

What is Photochemical Smog?

100

This international treaty was highly successful in phasing out CFCs to protect the ozone layer.

What is the Montreal Protocol?

200

This ecosystem service involves the control of climate and disease, such as wetlands absorbing floodwaters.

Regulating Service

200

This agricultural practice involves planting a single species over a large area, making it highly susceptible to pests.

What is Monoculture?

200

This is the term for using a single fuel source to generate both electricity and useful heat.

What is Cogeneration?

200

This term describes a toxin's concentration increasing as it moves up through different levels of a food web.

What is Biomagnification?

200

This occurs when CO2 reacts with seawater to form carbonic acid, stressing calcifying organisms like coral.

What is Ocean Acidification?

300

This layer of the atmosphere contains the "good" ozone that protects us from UV-B and UV-C radiation

What is the Stratosphere?

300

This method of irrigation is the most efficient (95%+), delivering water directly to the roots of plants.

What is Drip Irrigation?

300

This process involves pumping high-pressure fluid into rock to release trapped oil.

What is Fracking

300

This is the specific "trash juice" that is collected at the bottom of a sanitary landfill to protect groundwater.

What is Leachate?

300

This specific type of feedback loop occurs when melting ice lowers albedo, leading to further warming and more melting.

What is a Positive Feedback Loop?

400

This weather phenomenon occurs when trade winds weaken, allowing warm surface water to move toward the coast of South America.

What is El NiƱo?

400

This law requires an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for any major federal construction project.

What is NEPA (National Environmental Policy Act)?

400

According to the 10% Rule, this is the percentage of energy that is lost as heat (low-quality energy) as it moves from one trophic level to the next.

What is 90%?

400

This "cradle-to-grave" law regulates the handling and disposal of current hazardous waste.

What is RCRA?

400

This is the specific chemical compound released by melting permafrost that accelerates the greenhouse effect.

What is Methane

500

These are the two primary "limiting nutrients" that, when added to waterways, trigger eutrophication.

What are Nitrogen and Phosphorus?

500

This is the technical term for the buildup of salt in soil, often caused by over-irrigating in arid climates.

What is Salinization?

500

Because of the 10% Rule, ecosystems can support significantly fewer of these types of organisms compared to producers, explaining why top predators are rare.

What are Apex Predators?

500

These chemicals mimic natural hormones and can cause reproductive issues in top predators and humans.

What are Endocrine Disruptors?

500

A population of an invasive species is growing at a constant rate of 3.5% per year. If the initial population is 100 individuals, this is how many years it will take for the population to reach 400 individuals.

What is 40 years?

1.  Find the doubling time: $70 / 3.5 = 20 years.

2.  To get from 100 > 400 requires two doublings (100 > 200, then $200 > 400).

3.  20 years X 2 doublings = 40 years

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