6.1 Changing Landscape
6.2 Using Resources Wisely
6.3 Biodiversity
6.4 Meeting Ecolog. Challenge
MIX it UP
100
A farming strategy of planting a single, highly productive crop, year after year.
What is monoculture?
100
Lower land productivity caused by overfarming, overgrazing, seasonal drought, and climate change.
What is desertification?
100
The total of the variety of organisms in the biosphere.
What is Biodiversity?
100
The total area of the land and water ecosystems that provide the resources that each person uses.
What is Ecological footprint?
100
Smog, Acid Rain, Greenhouse Gases, and Particulates are all examples of this.
What is Air Pollution?
200
Coal, oil and natural gas are examples of this because they cannot be replaced in a reasonable amount of time.
What is nonrenewable resource?
200
The destruction of forests.
What is deforestation?
200
Altering habitats, hunting, introducing invasive species, releasing pollution into food webs, and contributing to climate change all threaten this.
What is biodiversity?
200
All of the energy you use, food you eat, and garbage you throw out contribute to YOUR what?
What is ecological footprint?
200
The nitrogen and sulfur compounds that are released into our air, as a result of burning fossil fuels, combine with water vapor to produce this type of precipitation.
What is acid rain?
300
A resource that can be reduced or replaced by healthy ecosystem functions.
What is a renewable resource?
300
The sum total of all different forms of genetic information carried by a particular species, or by all organisms on Earth.
What is the genetic diversity?
300
This term describes a place where significant numbers of species and habitats are in immediate danger of extinction.
What is an ecological hot spot?
300
Near the ground this is a pollutant, however high in the atmosphere it forms an important protective layer for our Earth.
What is Ozone layer?
300
Pesticide would show greatest concentration in the organism that is at the top or bottom of a food chain or web?
What is the top?
400
The Industrial Revolution of the 1800s have provided us with the conveniences of modern life, i.e. comfortable homes, clothes, electronic devices. Name one negative consequence as a result of the Industrial Revolution.
What is the environmental harm from the burning of fossil fuels.
400
The increasing concentration of a harmful substance in organisms of higher trophic levels in a food chain or food web.
What is biological magnification?
400
The splitting of ecosystems into pieces as a result of urban development.
What is habitat fragmentation?
400
The farming of aquatic animals.
What is aquaculture?
400
The loss of topsoil through the action of wind or water is this.
What is erosion?
500
We can use these resources, but in a way that avoids environment damage (avoiding pollution of water sources etc.) and preserves ecosystems.
What is sustainable development?
500
The primary sources of this are industrial and agricultural chemicals, residential sewage, and nonpoint sources.
What is Water Pollution?
500
This is known as the number of different species in the biosphere or in a particular area.
What is species diversity?
500
The IPCC reports that global temperatures are rising causing this.
What is Global Warming?
500
This gray-brown haze formed by chemical reactions among pollutants released into the air by industrial processes and automobile exhaust is know as _______.
What is smog?
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