Widely accepted generalizations based on research and having wide applicability. Considered in formulating management decisions
What is a principle
Scale that has a definite zero.
What is ratio?
Form of a gene.
What is an allele?
In the 1700 and 1800s, this kind of hunting exploited birds, deer, and other wildlife.
What is market hunting? (or pot hunting)
Father of game management.
Who is Aldo Leopold.
What 1964 act preserved areas where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by man, where man is a visitor who does not remain.
What is the 1964 Wilderness Act?
Group of coexisting individuals of the same species in an area.
What is a population?
Small, medium, large.
What is ordinal or ranked scale?
NAM
What is the North American Model of game management?
To address the biodiversity crisis, EO Wilson said scientists need to do what one thing?
What is catalog all species?
Author of Tragedy of the Commons.
Who is Garrett Hardin?
First legislation for wildlife conservation, limits transport of game. Strengthens game laws and stops illegal trade of wildlife e.g. plumage/meat.
What is the Lacey Act?
Free-ranging fish, mammals, birds, herps (etc) in their natural environment.
What is wildlife?
Changing of scales results in quantitatively different patterns.
What is transmutation?
Changes in gene frequencies through time.
What is evolution?
"To overspread and possess the whole of the continent..."
What is Manifest Destiny?
Commercialized as cheap food, hunted on a massive scale. Slow decline 1870-1890, last wild bird shot in 1901. Extinct.
What is the passenger pigeon?
Makes education affordable to all. Education seen as important to natural resource conservation.
What is the Land Grant Act of 1862?
The number of offspring an organism has that survives and reproduces in the next generation.
What is fitness
Growth rate is different among body parts.
What is allometric?
Greater number of plant species leads to greater community productivity and_______________
What is stability?
Term that refers to an organism having more than one offspring in its lifetime.
What is iteroparous.
Establishes Yellowstone National Park in 1872.
Authorizes the federal government to purchase lands to protect stream flow, set hunting seasons and bag limit for migratory birds.
What is the Weeks Act of 1911?
What is biodiversity?
When point-based measures of spatial phenomena are aggregated into district, resulting values are influence by shape and scale of aggregating unit.
What is the modifiable areal unit problem.
Allele frequency that confers fitness.
What is heterozygosity?
Two organizations whose missions include sustainable yield.
Who are the US Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management?
Silent Spring.
Who is Rachel Carson?
Taxes hunting weapons and ammunition and funds state wildlife restoration projects, research, and education.
What is the P-R Act? (Pittman Robertson Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act)
Evolution acts on what level?
What is population?
Ecological problems are complex, difficult to measure and cannot be scaled.
What is the problem of scale?
Contribution of individuals genotype passed on to next generation.
What is fitness?
Who is the US Fish and Wildlife Service.
First Director of the US Forest Service.
Who is Gifford Pinchot?
Ends open grazing on public lands.
What is the Taylor Grazing Act of 1934?
Ultimate source of biodiversity at all levels.
What is genetic diversity?
Term that defines time and space.
What is spatiotemproal?
Spatial interpolation where a few data points are used to interpolate a surface.
What is kriging?
In the Greater Yellowstone Complex, wolves are the apex predator and coyotes are ____________. Both influence pronghorn fawn survival rates.
Responsible for the development of the Civilian Conservation Corps.
Who is President Roosevelt?
Excise tax on fishing equipment and boats. Used to restore freshwater fisheries.
What is the D-J Act? (Dingell-Johnson Federal Aid in Fisheries Restoration Act)