Sources of
Pollution, Human
Impacts on
Ecosystems, and
Endocrine Disruptors
Human
Impacts on Wetlands
and Mangroves,
Eutrophication, and
Thermal Pollution
Persistent
Organic Pollutants
(POPs),
Bioaccumulation, and
Biomagnification
Solid Waste
Disposal & Waste
Reduction
Methods
Sewage
Treatment
Pollution and
Human
Health & LD50 and Dose Response
Curves
Stratospheric
Ozone Depletion
and Its Reduction
The
Greenhouse
Effect, Increases in Greenhouse Gases, and Climate
Change
Ocean Warming
and Ocean
Acidification
Invasive Species, Endangered Species, and Human Impacts on Biodiversity
100

This type of pollution comes from a single, identifiable source such as a factory pipe or smokestack.

What is point source pollution?

100

These ecosystems absorb excess water during storms and help reduce flooding.

What are wetlands?

100

DDT and PCBs are examples of this category of long-lasting synthetic pollutants.

What are persistent organic pollutants (POPs)?

100

This type of landfill uses liners, leachate collection systems, and methane recovery systems.

What is a sanitary landfill?

100

This stage of sewage treatment physically removes large debris using screens and grates.

What is primary treatment?

100

This value represents the dose of a chemical that kills 50% of a test population.

What is LD50?

100

This atmospheric layer contains ozone that absorbs harmful UV radiation.

What is the stratosphere?

100

This gas is the reference standard for comparing global warming potential.

What is carbon dioxide (CO₂)?

100

As atmospheric temperatures rise, the ocean absorbs much of Earth’s excess heat because water has this property.

What is high specific heat?

100

Species introduced outside their native range that spread rapidly and harm ecosystems are called these.

What are invasive species?

200

Runoff carrying fertilizer, oil, and sediment from many lawns and roads is this type of pollution source.

What is nonpoint source pollution?

200

A structure built along rivers to prevent flooding is called this.

What is a levee?

200

This process occurs when pollutants build up within the tissues of a single organism over time.

What is bioaccumulation?

200

This liquid forms when water drains through waste in a landfill and carries pollutants with it.

What is leachate?

200

Bacteria breaking down organic matter in aerated tanks occurs during this stage of sewage treatment.

What is secondary treatment?

200

On a dose-response curve, the independent variable is usually this factor.

What is chemical dose or concentration?

200

These human-made chemicals were widely used in refrigerants and aerosol sprays and are a major cause of ozone depletion.

What are chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)?

200

Among the major greenhouse gases discussed in AP Environmental Science, this group of compounds has the highest global warming potential (GWP).

What are CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons)?

200

When corals lose their symbiotic algae due to warming water, this process occurs.

What is coral bleaching?

200

Zebra mussels were primarily spread between waterways through this shipping-related mechanism.

What is ballast water?

300

These chemicals interfere with hormone systems and can affect reproduction and development in organisms.

What are endocrine disruptors?

300

The term referring to excess nitrogen and phosphorus entering waterways that can trigger rapid algal growth.

What is eutrophication?

300

When pollutant concentrations increase at higher trophic levels in a food web, this process is occurring.

What is biomagnification?

300

This gas produced by anaerobic decomposition in landfills can be collected and burned for energy.

What is methane?

300

This stage of wastewater treatment removes nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus that remain after the other types of treatment.

What is tertiary treatment?

300

When scientists determine a “safe” human exposure level for a chemical, they commonly divide the LD50 value from animal studies by this factor to provide a large safety margin.

What is 1,000?

300

This type of ultraviolet radiation splits O₂ molecules apart to begin ozone formation.

What is UV-C radiation?

300

The long-term graph showing steadily rising atmospheric CO₂ concentrations since 1958 is known by this name.

What is the Keeling Curve?

300

Warmer ocean water holds lower amounts of this dissolved gas needed by marine organisms.

What is oxygen?

300

Species with broad niches, flexible diets, and high adaptability are classified as these.

What are generalists?

400

A species dies when exposed to low pollutant concentrations, while another survives. This ecological concept explains the difference.

What is range of tolerance?

400

As algae die and decompose after eutrophication, bacteria consume large amounts of this dissolved substance from the water.

What is dissolved oxygen?

400

Top predators like bald eagles and tuna often contain the highest concentrations of POPs because they occupy this position in a food web.

What is a high trophic level?

400

Among the three Rs, this strategy is considered the most sustainable because it prevents waste before it is created.

What is reduce?

400

This term refers to liquid waste discharged from a wastewater treatment plant into a body of water.

What is effluent?

400

Exposure to asbestos is strongly associated with this type of cancer.

What is mesothelioma?

400

This international agreement successfully reduced global production and use of ozone-depleting substances such as CFCs.

What is the Montréal Protocol?

400

Scientists study trapped ancient air bubbles in these to estimate past greenhouse gas concentrations.

What are ice cores?

400

Ocean acidification begins when atmospheric CO₂ dissolves in seawater and forms this acid.

What is carbonic acid?

400

This international agreement regulates trade in endangered species between countries.

What is CITES?

500

After heavy rainfall, fertilizer from large areas of agricultural fields washes into nearby waterways and contributes to algal blooms. This type of pollution source is being described.

What is a nonpoint source?

500

Hydroelectric dams can disrupt salmon reproduction because they interfere with this natural behavior.

What is migration to spawning grounds?

500

Dioxins are especially likely to accumulate in meat, dairy, and fish because these pollutants concentrate in this type of biological tissue.

What is fat tissue?

500

Electronic waste is considered hazardous largely because it contains toxic heavy metals such as these two elements.

What are lead and mercury?

500

Secondary treatment demands large amounts of this gas because aerobic bacteria need it to decompose organic waste efficiently.

What is oxygen (O₂)?

500

Unlike stratospheric ozone, this form of ozone worsens asthma and irritates lung tissue.

What is tropospheric ozone?

500

Polar stratospheric clouds above Antarctica accelerate ozone depletion because they release this highly reactive element from compounds such as HCl and ClONO₂.

What is chlorine?

500

Sea level rise occurs from melting continental ice sheets and this additional process caused by warming ocean water molecules spreading farther apart.

What is thermal expansion?

500

Ocean acidification harms shell-forming organisms because increased hydrogen ions reduce the availability of this ion needed to build calcium carbonate shells.

What is carbonate (CO₃²⁻)?

500

Species with narrow habitat requirements are especially vulnerable to extinction because they are these types of species.

What are specialists?