Pollution
Topic 1
Water Pollution and Biomagnification
Ecology
Biodiversity
100

This is the term for pollutants which are released from numerous, widely dispersed origins.

What is non-point source pollution?

100

Anything that the Earth supplies which can be used by humans, e.g. coal, iron ore, forests, water, air

Natural Resources

100
This chemical being sprayed on crops and in communities was largely the reason for Rachel Carson to write her book "A Silent Spring" which kick started the modern environmental movement. 

DDT

100

These are three examples of abiotic factors. 

Temperature, Precipitation, sunlight, soil and water PH, humidity etc... 

100

The range of different places and different environmental conditions within one area

What is Habitat Diversity?

200

This is the definition of point-source pollution.

What is the release of a pollutant (or pollutants) from a single, clearly identifiable site - for example a factory chimney or the waste disposal pipe of a a sewage works into a river.

200

something that is capable of being broken down by natural biological processes is said to be

Biodegradable

200

Outline 2 sources of water pollution.

runoff, sewage, industrial discharge, solid domestic waste

200

This is the process by which habitats develop and evolve over time.

What is Ecological Succession

200

The gradual change in the genetic character of populations over many generations?

What is Evolution?

300
Carbon dioxide, sulphur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, photochemical smog and carbon monoxide are examples of pollution from combustion of these.

What are fossil fuels?

300

This EVS would hold the belief that: Humans are responsible for sustainable global systems through control of population and resource use

What is anthropocentrism 
300

What is the phenomenon of too many nutrients causing lack of plant growth and the death of animals due to the lack of oxygen?

Eutrophication

300

This is the process by which different ecosystems change in an area due to differing abiotic factors. 

Zonation-- Such as on a mountain. 

300

A species conservation status is determined by its population size, degree of specialisation, distribution, reproductive potential and behaviour, geographic range, degree of fragmentation, quality of habitat, trophic level and probability of extinction. The IUCN manages a data base of this information, called the WHAT list?

Red

400

The changes to their presence or absence in an ecosystem is recorded to indicate an indirect measurement of pollution.

Indicator Species

400

Give an example of a positive Feedback Loop

Permafrost Melting

Forest Fires

Ice caps melting

400

Outline one effect of the burning of fossil fuels on marine life.

Ex:  acid rain that ends up in the sea or other bodies of water and poisons or changes the ph in aquatic ecosystems

400

This is the main difference between fundamental niche and realized niche.

A fundamental niche describes the full range of conditions and resources in which a specie could survive and reproduce, but a realized niche describes the actual conditions and resources n which a specie exists due to biotic interactions.

400

D can be used to compare the biodiversity of two similar habitats.

What is the Simpson diversity index?

500

These pollutants are formed by primary pollutants undergoing physical or chemical changes, for example, sulphuric acid forming when sulphur trioxide reacts with water.

What is Secondary Pollution?

500

What are the three levels of managing of pollution?

Level 1 – Preventing Pollution

Level 2 – Control Release of Pollutant 

Level 3 – Clean up and Restoration

500

With your understanding of processes such as biomagnification, outline how pollution in water can affect human food consumption.

pollutants like heavy metals (e.g., mercury, lead), persistent organic pollutants (e.g., PCBs, dioxins), and pesticides can enter water bodies, predatory aquatic organisms (e.g., fish, crustaceans) consume herbivores, leading to further concentration of pollutants in their bodies. humans may consume these animals

500

These are three impacts that the introduction of an invasive species could have in an ecosystem. 

 Cascade effect- 

Loss of direct competitors

Loss predator of those competitors and so on..  

Shift in equilibrium (positive feedback?)

Introduction of new diseases 

Extirpated prey species of invasive 

Loss of diversity in the system overall

Possible increase in food for higher trophic level or humans?

500

The mechanism by which evolution takes place.

What is Natural Selection