Oceans
Biodiversity
Greenhouse Effect & Climate Change
Stratospheric Ozone
Legislation
100

One-celled autotrophic protists responsible for 70% of the oxygen on Earth

What is: phytoplankton

100

The phenomenon of living things becoming better adapted to their environments over time

What is: Evolution

100

The natural phenomenon that helps stabilize Earth's temperature

What is: Greenhouse Effect

100

The type of UV light that stratospheric ozone protects us from

What is: UV-B

100

Legislation that gives the EPA authority to regulate major air pollutants that are harmful to human health

What is: the Clean Air Act

200

Two effects that increased CO2 concentrations have had on oceans

What is: ocean warming and ocean acidification

200

The three levels of biodiversity

What is: Ecosystem, species, and genetic diversity

200

Direction in which biome boundaries are moving/expanding due to global warming

What is: outward from the equator

200

The number of O3 molecules a single atom of Cl can destroy before being removed from the stratosphere

What is: 100,000 ozone molecules

200

The piece of legislation responsible for the repair of the ozone hole

What is: the Montreal Protocol - an agreement that regulated the consumption & production of 100 man-made ozone depleting substance (including CFCs)

300

Four ecosystem services of the ocean (only two can be cultural)

What is: hydrological cycle, production of oxygen, coral reefs - biodiversity & high NPP & coastal protection, carbon sequestration, climate regulation - current distribute heat & nutrients and influence weather, food production, human water use, recreational use, aesthetics

300

Phenomenon that occurs when two different species living in the same territory start to fill the same ecological niche, they will compete for exactly the same resources

What is: Competitve Exclusion Principle

300

Name three Greenhouse gases, excluding CO2 and CH4

What is: H2O (water), N2O (nitrous oxide), O3 (ozone), CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons), HFCs (hydrofluorocarbons)

300

Two effects on human health that result from the loss of the ozone layer

What is: melanoma or sunburn, blindness, more photochemical smog

300

One international agreement related to reducing greenhouse gas emissions

What is: 

Kyoto Protocol - required only developed countries to reduce emissions

the Paris Climate Agreement - recognized that climate change is a shared problem and called on all countries to set emissions targets

400

The acid generated in the process of ocean acdification, responsible for weakening the shells of marine life

What is: carbonic acid

400

An invasive species most likely fall into which of the following categories:

generalist or specialist?

small or large range of tolerance?

R-selected or K-selected?

Type I or Type III survirvorship?

What is:

Generalist

Large ROT

R-selected - fast reproduction

Type III - many offspring, little parental care, fast population spread with most dying in early life

400

Three sources of atmospheric pollution for the most prevalent (not necessarily most potent) greenhouse gas

What is: sources of CO2 include combustion of fossil fuels (electricity generation, transportaion, manufacturing), aerobic decomposition, cellular respiration, volcanic eruptions, tilling soil, deforestation, slash and burn agriculture, wildfires

400

The reason we have ozone on our planet

What is: Life! 2 billion years ago, photosynthesis provided enough oxygen that is reached the stratosphere and was converted into O3 via sunlight

400

A piece of legislation/agreement that protects endangered species

What is: 

the Endangered Species Act - prohibits the import, export, or taking of fish and wildlife and plants that are listed as threatened or endangered species

CITES (Convention on International Trade o Endangered Species) - ensures that international trade in specimens of wild animals and plants does not threaten the survival of the species in the wild

500

Two solutions to commercial fishing's destruction of oceanic ecosystems

What is: Individual transferable quotas (ITQs), Aquaculture, & Turtle Exclusion Devices (TEDs)

500

Three anthropogenic actions and how they have impacted biodiversity

What is: 

Urban sprawl - habitat fragmentation 

Agriculture - habitat destruction 

Accidentatlly or purposefully introducing invasives - ecosystem/trophic collapse

Air pollution - reproductive stress for animals, stress on low ROT species, habitat fragmentation (melting of ice bridges), ocean acidification etc

Hunting, overfishing - Extinction

Monocropping, GMOs - Loss of genetic diversity

Insecticides - loss of pollinators

Pollution (like oil spills and trash) - leeches toxins, interferes with reproduction, metabolism, nervous system, etc

500

Four distinct problems resulting from increased global temperatures

What is: melting icecaps, glacial retreat, sea level rise, immigration/emigration, extreme weather events, economical costs associated with drought/hurricanes/tourism loss etc., harmful algal blooms, the northward spread of malaria, ocean warming, changes in animal migration partterns, habitat loss, and so many more!

500

The chemical process that led to the hole in the ozone layer (you need to describe at least two distinct steps).

What is: sunlight releases a Cl from a CFC, then this Cl catalyzes the conversion of O3 to O2

500

The six criteria pollutants of the Clean Air Act

What is: NO2 (nitrogen dioxide), O3 (ozone), SO2 (sulfur dioxide), CO (carbon monoxide), Pb (lead), PM (particulate matter)

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