MC1
MC2
MC3
VOCAB1
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100

By far, the biggest cause of biodiversity loss today is

A. climate change.

B. pollution.

C. habitat change and fragmentation.

D. over-harvesting.

C. habitat change and fragmentation.

100

In the United States, what is the major law that protects biodiversity?

A. Endangered Species Act

B. Convention on Biological Diversity

C. Species Survival Plan

D. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

A. Endangered Species Act

100

Which of the following is an example of a method for managing whole ecosystems and habitats?

A. Species Survival Plans (SSPs)

B. cloning

C. captive breeding

D. mapping biodiversity hotspots

D. mapping biodiversity hotspots

100

Species that can only be found in specific areas and nowhere else.

Endemic

100

An area with a high number of endemic species that is also losing its biodiversity at a fast rate.


Biodiversity hotspot

200

Which is the most direct way in which biodiversity can provide a source of income?

A. medicines

B. ecotourism

C. research

D. agriculture

B. ecotourism

200

There is a plan to establish an 8000-kilometer-long strip of land across eight Southeast Asian countries to rejoin fragments of tiger habitat. This is an example of a

A. captive breeding program.

B. wildlife corridor.

C. worldwide biodiversity treaty.

D. conservation concession.

B. wildlife corridor.

200

Tigers living in warm climates have thinner coats of fur than tigers living in cool climates. This is a result of

A. ecosystem diversity.

B. genetic diversity.

C. species diversity.

D. general diversity.

B. genetic diversity.

200

Breeding and raising organisms in controlled enviroments for example zoos.

Captive breeding

200

The removal of a species from an area, but it can still be found elsewhere.


Extirpation

300

The disappearance of a particular population from a given area, but not of the entire species globally, is called

A. fragmentation.

B. poaching.

C. extinction.

D. extirpation.

D. extirpation.

300

One way that zoos and aquariums help increase wildlife populations is through

A. conservation concessions.

B. International biodiversity treaties.

C. captive breeding programs.

D. wildlife corridors.

C. captive breeding programs.

300

The Sikhote-Alin Mountains, and the Siberian tigers living on them, are separated from other mountain

regions in which the tigers could live. The mountains are an example of a(n)

A. mass extinction.

B. mass extirpation.

C. invasive species.

D. habitat fragmentation.

D. habitat fragmentation.

300

Species that are vulnerable to become endangered soon.

Threatened species

300

Patches of habitable zones are physically separated by areas with unsuitable habitats.


Habitat fragmentation

400

Which product is often derived from the natural environment?

A. cooking oil

B. fuel

C. medicines

D. all of the above

D. all of the above

400

What global phenomenon has caused some organisms to move toward the poles or to higher altitudes?

A. invasive species

B. warming temperatures

C. pollution

D. habitat fragmentation

B. warming temperatures

400

What is the correct hierarchy of taxonomic groups, from largest to smallest?

A. genus, family, species, subspecies

B. family, genus, species, subspecies

C. genus, family, subspecies, species

D. family, genus, subspecies, species

B. family, genus, species, subspecies

400

A program designed to protect a single species of organisms.

Species Survival Plan (SSP)

400

Species at a serious risk of extinction

Endangered species

500

Which of the following represents single-species approaches to protecting biodiversity?

A. selling conservation concessions

B. captive breeding and cloning

C. mapping biodiversity hotspots

D. building wildlife corridors

B. captive breeding and cloning

500

A species that is at serious risk of extinction is called a(n)

A. extirpated species.

B. invasive species.

C. endangered species.

D. threatened species.

C. endangered species.

500

The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) and the Convention on Biological Diversity are examples of

A. polls measuring American opinion about biodiversity.

B. organizations that promote poaching.

C. Treaties to protect biodiversity.

D. laws to increase the number of species.

C. Treaties to protect biodiversity.

500

The variety of species in a particular region.

Species diversity

500

US Law enacted in 1973 to protect endangered and threatened species.

Endangered Species Act (ESA)

600

To manage, protect, and reintroduce threatened and endangered species are the goals of

A. Species Survival Plans.

B. biodiversity hotspots.

C. wildlife corridors.

D. conservation concessions.

A. Species Survival Plans.

600

High levels of biodiversity tend to

A. make an ecosystem less resilient.

B. have little or no effect on ecosystems.

C. increase the stability of an ecosystem.

D. decrease an ecosystem’s resistance.

C. increase the stability of an ecosystem.

600

If current trends continue, the modern geologic era, known as the Quaternary period, may see the extinction of

A. all species on Earth.

B. almost 20 percent of all species.

C. more than half of all species.

D. one or two species per century.

C. more than half of all species.

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