Soils
Aquatics
Forestry
Wildlife
Special Topic
100

What are three reasons why we study soils?

  • Snapshot of geologic, climatic, biological and human history

  • Waste decomposer

  • Carbon sink!

  • Source material for construction, medicine, art, etc.

  • Filter of water and wastes

  • Essential natural resource

  • Home to organisms

  • Medium for plant growth

  • Producer and absorber of gases

  • Medium of crop production

100

What is a wetland?

Areas where water covers the soil or is present either at or near the surface of the soil all year or for varying periods of time during the year

100

What are gymnosperms?

Naked seeds, have seeds exposed on cones or scales without flowers or fruit

100

What is the Lacey Act (1900)?

First federal law for wildlife protection which prevented interstate sale/trafficing of wildlife. It also supported states’ initiatives to restore wildlife population and required wildlife shipments to be clearly labeled

100

What are three sources of phosphorus in waterways?

  • Soil erosion (attaches to soil particles)

  • Fertilizer (lawn and agricultural)

  • Animal waste

  • Point sources - water treatment lants

  • Nonpoint sources - stormwater

200

What is dirt?

Soil that is removed from its natural environment

200

Provide two examples of an inland/non-tidal wetland

  • Freshwater marsh

  • Bog

  • Swamp

  • Fen

  • Vernal Pool

200

What are silvics?

Ecological characteristics of each tree species (how a species grows and what it requires to thrive)

200

What animal does White-nose Syndrome impact?

Bats

200

What is the primary goal of the Clean Water Act (CWA)?

To restore and maintain the chemical, physical and biological integrity of the Nation’s waters

300

What is pedogenesis?

The study of the origin and formation of soil and used to describe the formation of soil horizons

300

What is the major characteristic of a vernal pool?

They are often temporary bodies of water, drying up in the summer

300

What are three things that forest fragmentation results in?

  • Degraded habitat

  • Increased pollution

  • Increased runoff into waterbodies

  • Invasive species access

  • More wildlife-human interactions

300

What animal experiences Chronic Wasting Disease?

Deer

300

What government agency regulates water by monitoring and sampling, water quality assessments, restoration plans (TMDL) and implementation practices in RI?

RI DEM Water Resources

400

What type of soil is most of RI?

  • Till soils (60%)

  • Bonus: this is because of the Pleistocene glaciation which transported glacial sediment known as glacial till. Glacial till is unsorted/stratified material deposited beneath and within glacial ice

400

What three characteristics are used to identify/delineate a wetland?

  • Hydrology: amount, distribution and movement of water in a given area; The prolonged presence of water creates conditions that favor the growth of specially adapted plants

  • Hydrophytes/hydrophytic vegetation: wetlands plants; specially adapted to grow in saturated soils

  • Hydric soils: soils that have a prolonged period of saturation, resulting in low-oxygen conditions; hydric means the space between the soil grains is filled with water

400

What does fascicled refer to?

Plant structures that grow in a tight bundle, cluster or tuft, usually attached to the same base (ex: pine trees)

400

What are exceptions to the Migratory Bird Treaty Act?

  • Regulated hunting of game species

  • Scientific research

  • Native American cultural ceremonies

400

What are two ways that we can minimize nonpoint source pollution?

  • Move water underground

  • Stabilize shares and streambanks

  • Vegetated buffers

  • Pervious surfaces

  • Best management practices

500

What are two properties of an outwash plain?

  • Dominantly sand and gravel sized particles

  • Rapid water movement, associated with aquifers

  • Apparent watertable

  • Areas without stones, boulders or stone walls

500

What is the difference between bogs and fens?

  • Bogs only receive water and nutrients from precipitation

  • Fens receive a significant portion of water and nutrients from groundwater sources

500

What is Basal Area (BA)?

Area of the cross-section of a tree at breast height (4.5 feet from the ground)

500

What do the State and Tribal Wildlife Grants (2000) offer?

  • States and Tribes can receive funding by writing a Wildlife Action Plan and revising every 10 years

  • Targets “Species of Greatest Conservation Need”

  •  Identifies threats to particular species/habitats, and actions we are committing to take

500

What is Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL)?

  • Tool for states to focus on waterways at risk

  • Measures how much pollution a system can handle per day to still meet water quality standards

  • Bonus: It is calculated by WDA (waste-load allocations - PS) + LA (load allocations - NPS) + MOS (margin of safety)

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