What is biodiversity?
variety of species (plants, animals, fungi, microorganisms) in an ecosystem and the genetic, species, and ecosystem-level variety.
Define "per-capita consumption."
consumption is the average amount of a resource used by each person
one example of a nonrenewable resource.
Coal, oil, natural gas, metal ores (iron, copper)
What is a greenhouse gas? Give one example
A greenhouse gas is a gas in the atmosphere that traps outgoing infrared radiation and warms Earth's surface.
Example: Carbon dioxide (CO2) or methane (CH4).
Give one example of a method or tool scientists use to monitor human impact on land or water.
Remote sensing (satellite imagery/Google Earth time-lapse)
water-quality testing
automated sensors for temperature/oxygen
biodiversity surveys
Name two ecosystem services that healthy ecosystems provide for humans
Water purification, pollination of crops, air purification, soil formation and fertility, climate regulation, decomposition and nutrient cycling, flood control.
Describe one short-term and one long-term environmental impact of increased human population.
Why are mineral and fossil fuel resources unequally distributed around Earth? (Name one geoscience process responsible.)
geologic processes create and concentrate resources in certain places
plate tectonics and subduction zones concentrate metal ores via hydrothermal activity
burial of organic sediments (large swamps & wetlands) in certain basins created petroleum deposits
Name one human activity and one natural process that can change global temperatures
What is one engineered solution that can reduce fossil fuel use in a community?
Install solar panels or wind turbines; improve public transit and bike infrastructure; increase energy efficiency in buildings; electrify vehicle fleets combined with renewable electricity.
What is an invasive species and one negative effect it can have on native biodiversity?
invasive species is a non-native organism introduced to an area that spreads and causes harm.
Negative effect: outcompetes native species for resources, reduces native populations, disrupts food webs, or alters habitat.
Using cause-and-effect, explain how increasing per-capita meat consumption can affect land use and freshwater supplies.
Example:
Increased meat consumption causes higher demand for livestock and feed crops; leads to more land converted to pasture or cropland (deforestation) and higher water use for irrigation and animal drinking/waste processing, reducing freshwater availability and harming habitats.
What is an aquifer? Why can groundwater be considered a limited resource?
aquifer is a body of rock or sediment that stores groundwater
Groundwater can be limited because recharge rates are often much slower than withdrawal rates (groundwater overdraft) (overconsumption)
so aquifers can be depleted faster than they refill.
If a graph shows atmospheric CO2 rising over the past century while global mean temperature also rises. What question would you ask to clarify evidence that CO2 influences temperature?
- "Does the timing and magnitude of CO2 increases relate to temperature changes after accounting for natural factors (like volcanic eruptions and solar variation)?"
- "What other data (e.g., radiative forcing estimates, paleoclimate records) support a link between them?"
Describe a simple school-based monitoring plan to detect local water pollution from runoff. (how would you research any pollution in the water during a storm?)
Explain "resilience" in an ecosystem and give one factor that increases resilience.
Resilience is an ecosystem’s ability to return to or maintain stable conditions after disturbances.
Factor that increases resilience: high biodiversity, habitat connectivity, intact trophic structure, or low levels of pollution.
Provide two pieces of evidence you could use to construct an argument that human population growth impacts Earth’s systems.
graphs of human population vs. global CO2 emissions
freshwater withdrawal rates correlated with population growth
species extinctions or biodiversity indices alongside human population growth
Explain how plate tectonics can influence where metal ore deposits form.
Plate boundaries (like subduction zones) produce volcanic and hydrothermal activity that concentrates metals into ore deposits. Tectonic movement will expose these deposits
plate movement controls where ore-forming processes occur.
Describe two types of evidence (quantitative) scientists use to evaluate factors affecting global temperatures over the past century.
temperature records
atmospheric greenhouse gas concentration records
global sea level rise
satellite radiative flux measurements
volcanic aerosol optical depth records
Identify two constraints (economic, social, or environmental) a community might face when choosing between restoration and technological fixes to protect a habitat.
Two design solutions are proposed to restore a wetland
A: plant native vegetation B: build concrete drainage with filters).
List one strength and one weakness for each solution regarding maintaining biodiversity and ecosystem services.
short claim (one sentence) about population growth and resource use, and list two types of data you would need to support that claim.
Using "evidence", explain why oil deposits are found in some regions but not others. Include one past geologic process and one modern human impact on availability.
Oil forms from the burial and heating of organic-rich marine sediments in sedimentary basins (past process) only regions with the right depositional and tectonic history have oil
Modern human impact: extraction removes oil from reservoirs reducing local availability and can change pressure regimes; poor management can cause faster depletion and environmental damag
Propose one clarifying question about the role of volcanic activity in temperature change, and state what evidence would help answer it.
Propose a monitoring-plus-mitigation (watching-plus-helping) plan to protect a local wetland threatened by nearby city development.
Include: one monitoring (research) method, one mitigation (helping) action, and one way to examine success.
Mitigation (how to fix the problem):
How to know it worked: