APES FRQ Unit 1 Practice

studied byStudied by 2 people
0.0(0)
learn
LearnA personalized and smart learning plan
exam
Practice TestTake a test on your terms and definitions
spaced repetition
Spaced RepetitionScientifically backed study method
heart puzzle
Matching GameHow quick can you match all your cards?
flashcards
FlashcardsStudy terms and definitions

1 / 200

flashcard set

Earn XP

Description and Tags

most likely won't need to know everything on here but I loaded it up just in case. be sure to read textbook, look over notes, look at previous FRQs etc.

201 Terms

1
Describe a biological process by which carbon is removed from the atmosphere and converted to organic molecules.
Photosynthesis- In Photosynthesis, plants take in CO2 from the atmosphere and convert it into glucose/complex carbohydrates.
New cards
2
Describe a biological process by which carbon is converted from organic molecules to a gas and returned to the atmosphere.
A biological process in which carbon is converted into a gas is respiration. In respiration, glucose/complex carbohydrates are broken down to CO2 and released into the atmosphere.
New cards
3
Explain how atmospheric carbon is incorporated into two oceanic sinks.
Atmospheric CO2 can be dissolved directly into the ocean or into precipitation and eventually reach the ocean and can then be taken up by marine organisms for shells and skeletons. Carbon can also react with other elements and form limestone or sedimentary rocks.
New cards
4
Identify one terrestrial sink, other than fossil fuels, that stores carbon for thousands to millions of years.
Sedimentary rocks can store carbon for thousands to millions of years.
New cards
5
Discuss TWO other human activities that increase the concentration of carbon in the atmosphere.
Two human activities that increase the concentration of carbon in the atmosphere are deforestation and slash-and-burn agriculture. In deforestation, we are removing the reservoirs for CO2 by cutting the trees down. In slash-and-burn agriculture, burning organic matter releases carbon into the atmosphere.
New cards
6
Identify an environmental problem that results from elevated atmospheric carbon concentrations.
Discuss one consequence of the problem you identified.
The Greenhouse Effect can occur due to elevated amounts of carbon in the atmosphere. This causes the sun's heat to get trapped and increases the temperature of the planet.
New cards
7
Describe one major way in which the phosphorus cycle differs from the carbon cycle.
Unlike the carbon cycle, the phosphorus cycle does not occur in the atmosphere.
New cards
8
Identify one reason that phosphorus is necessary for organisms.
Phosphorus is necessary for organisms because it is required for cellular respiration.
New cards
9
Identify the class of chemical compounds that is primarily responsible for the thinning of the stratospheric ozone layer and describe TWO major uses for which these chemicals were manufactured.
Chlorofluorocarbons (CFC's) are primarily responsible for the thinning of the ozone layer. CFC's are used in the production of styrofoam and solvent/cleaner.
New cards
10
Describe how the chemical compounds that you identified in part (A) destroy stratospheric ozone molecules. You may include chemical equation as part of your answer.
CL+03 \---\> CLO+02
When a CFC molecule comes into contact with ultraviolet light exposure they tend to split causing a chlorine atom to escape. Due to the fact that chlorine by itself is extremely radioactive, it bonds with oxygen atoms that were stolen from a ozone molecule.
New cards
11
Identify the major environmental consequence of the depletion of stratospheric ozone and describe TWO effects on ecosystems and/or human health that can result.
The major environmental consequence of ozone depletion is that the chlorine can gather in one place, such as the ozone hole in Antarctica, and create a hole in the stratospheric ozone which releases UV-B and UV-C. Two effects can be skin cancer in humans and decreased plant productivity.
New cards
12
Ozone formed at ground level is a harmful pollutant. Describe TWO effects that ground-level ozone can have on ecosystems and/or human health.
In humans, ground-level ozone can cause pain or burning in the chest and shortness of breath. In the environment, it can lead to reduced agricultural crop and commercial forest yields.
New cards
13
Biogeochemical Cycles
The movement of abiotic factors between the living and nonliving components within ecosystems; also known as nutrient cycles (i.e., water cycle, carbon cycle, oxygen cycle, and nitrogen cycle).
New cards
14
The Water Cycle
Evaporation, condensation, precipitation, run off, transpiration, infiltration. Humans impact this by storing water in reservoirs, irrigation, deforestation, and putting chemicals in it
New cards
15
Condensation
The change of state from a gas to a liquid
New cards
16
Run off
The draining away of water (or substances carried in it) from the surface of an area of land, a building or structure, etc.
New cards
17
Transpiration
Evaporation of water from the leaves of a plant
New cards
18
Infiltration
Flow of water from the land surface into the subsurface
New cards
19
The Carbon Cycle
The organic circulation of carbon from the atmosphere into organisms and back again. Humans impact this by burning fossil fuels and cutting down trees,
New cards
20
The Nitrogen Cycle
The transfer of nitrogen from the atmosphere to the soil, to living organisms, and back to the atmosphere. Humans impact this by altering the amount of nitrogen that is stored in the biosphere.
New cards
21
The Phosphorus Cycle
The movement of phosphorus atoms from rocks through the biosphere and hydrosphere and back to rocks.
New cards
22
The Sulfur Cycle
Cyclic movement of sulfur in various chemical forms from the environment to organisms and then back to the environment. Humans impact this by burning coal, natural gas, and other fossil fuels which greatly increases the amount of sulfur in the atmosphere and ocean and depleted the sedimentary rock sink
New cards
23
Where are the four major areas of water storage on Earth?
Atmosphere, surface water, ground water, and living things
New cards
24
Abiotic Factors
Nonliving components of environment.
New cards
25
Biotic Factors
All the living organisms that inhabit an environment
New cards
26
Habitat
Where an organism lives and any aspect of the location
New cards
27
Niche
Full range of physical and biological conditions in which an organism lives and the way in which the organism uses those conditions
New cards
28
Organism
Any form of life. Belongs to any of the 6 kingdoms
New cards
29
Species
Group of organisms of same type that can reproduce to have fertile offspring
New cards
30
Population
A group of individuals that belong to the same species and live in the same area
New cards
31
Ecosystem
A biological community of interacting organisms and their physical environment. All abiotic and biotic factors.
New cards
32
Producers/Autotrophs
Organisms that make their own food from compounds and energy obtained from the environment
New cards
33
Photosynthesis
Conversion of light energy from the sun into chemical energy
New cards
34
Salinity
A measure of the amount of dissolved salts in a given amount of liquid
New cards
35
Plankton
Small, weakly-swimming, free floating organisms
New cards
36
Decomposers
Organisms that break down the dead remains of other organisms
New cards
37
Phytoplankton
Photosynthetic algae found near the surface of the ocean
New cards
38
Euphotic Zone
Surface layer where photosynthesis is usually confined to
New cards
39
Where are nutrients found in abundance?
In shallow and cold waters
New cards
40
Cultural Eutrophication
When human inputs of nutrients from the atmosphere and nearby urban areas accelerate the eutrophication of lakes
New cards
41
Watershed
The area of land that is drained by a water system
New cards
42
Human Impact on Freshwater Ecosystems
  1. Dams, diversions, and canals fragment about 40% of our world's largest rivers

  2. Flood control levees destroy aquatic habitats

  3. Cities and farmlands add pollutants and excess plant nutrients to streams and rivers causing eutrophication

  4. Many inland wetlands have been drained or filled to grow crops or have been covered with concrete, asphalt, and buildings

New cards
43
Biome
A group of ecosystems that share similar climates and typical organisms
New cards
44
Climatograms
Chart that is used to better understand climate by looking at the average temperature and precipitation
New cards
45
Desert
An area where evaporation exceeds precipitation and usually has little vegitation. Plants are well adapted to prevent water loss.
New cards
46
Grasslands
Usually occur in the interiors of continents in areas too moist for deserts and too dry for forests. Seasonal drought
New cards
47
Savanna
Has warm temperatures year round with alternating wet and long dry seasons. Plants have deep root systems, grasses and shrubs. Grazing animals
New cards
48
Tundra
Treeless arctic or alpine biome characterized by cold, harsh winters, a short growing season, and potential for frost any month of the year; vegetation includes low-growing perennial plants, mosses and lichens
New cards
49
Tropical Rainforest
Found around the equator and has a wet and warm climate year round allowing for the growth of a dense canopy of tall trees. Have shallow root systems. Soil is low in nutrients. 40% have been destroyed
New cards
50
Temperate Deciduous Forest
Forest in a temperate region, characterized by trees that drop their leaves annually
New cards
51
Taiga(Boreal Forest)
Subarctic climate with long, cold, dry winters, and short , mild summers. Dominated by coniferous evergreen trees. Plant diversity is low
New cards
52
Consumers
An organism that obtains energy and nutrients by feeding on other organisms or their remains
New cards
53
Parasitism
A relationship between two organisms of different species where one benefits and the other is harmed
New cards
54
Mutualism
A relationship between two species in which both species benefit
New cards
55
Commensalism
A relationship between two organisms in which one organism benefits and the other is unaffected
New cards
56
Intraspecific competition
Competition among members of the same species
New cards
57
Interspecific Competition
Competition between members of different species
New cards
58
Resource Partitioning
When species competing for similar scarce resources evolve specialized traits that allow them to share resources by using parts of them, using them at different times, or using them in different ways
New cards
59
How does the phosphorus cycle differentiate from other biogeochemical cycles?
It does not include a gas phase
New cards
60
Predator Adaptations
Camouflage, speed, packs, poisons, acute senses, claws, teeth, fangs, stingers, etc.
New cards
61
Prey Adaptations
retreat, camouflage, warning coloration, poison, mimicry, spines, thorns, etc.
New cards
62
What two factors are most important in determining the type of biome that exists in an area?
Temperature and precipitation
New cards
63
Coral bleaching
A phenomenon in which algae inside corals die, causing the corals to turn white. When this happens, the habitat for the animals are destroyed
New cards
64
What are some major threats to coral reefs?
Overfishing, fishing using cyanide and dynamite, pollution from sewage and agriculture, massive outbreaks of predatory starfish, invasive species, and sedimentation from poor land use practices
New cards
65
Net Primary Productivity (NPP)
The amount of energy lost through respiration by producers sublated from the gross primary productivity of an ecosystem.
New cards
66
Food Chain
A series of steps in which organisms transfer energy by eating and being eaten
New cards
67
Food web
A community of organisms where there are several interrelated food chains
New cards
68
What limits the number of trophic levels in an ecological pyramid?
Decrease in energy at higher trophic levels limits this. When the number of links keep increasing, the amount of energy available decreases, as only 10% of energy gets transferred from one trophic level to the next
New cards
69
Ecological Efficiency
Percentage of energy transferred from one trophic level to another in a food chain or web
New cards
70
Biomass
A measure of the total dry mass of organisms within a particular region
New cards
71
Pyramid of energy
A pyramid that shows the total amount of energy available at each trophic level
New cards
72
Biomass Pyramid
Diagram representing the biomass in each trophic level of an ecosystem
New cards
73
Gross Primary Productivity (GPP)
The total amount of solar energy that producers in an ecosystem capture via photosynthesis over a given amount of time
New cards
74
Fresh Water Biomes
ponds, lakes, streams, rivers. \***Vital source of drinking water\***
New cards
75
The Ocean
a major storage reservoir of carbon
New cards
76
For a primary producer, the main function of photosynthesis is to manufacture
glucose
New cards
77
In a typical forest ecosystem, dead trees and fallen trees are most important because of their role in
providing habitats for wildlife
New cards
78
10% rule
Only 10% of the total energy produced at each trophic level is available to the next level. The amount of energy passed up to the levels of the food pyramid reduces as you go up.
New cards
79
Nitrogen
Most abundant gas in the atmosphere
New cards
80
phosphorus reservoirs
sedimentary rocks from ancient oceans (sediments)
soil
dissolved in oceans
biomass
New cards
81
The two major processes involved in the carbon cycle are
photosynthesis and cellular respiration
New cards
82
The ultimate source of energy for terrestrial ecosystems is the
sun
New cards
83
Tropical rain forest soil
is quickly depleted of nutrients when the forest is removed
New cards
84
competitive exclusion
Strong competition can lead to local elimination of one of the species.
New cards
85
Brazil and Indonesia
Contain the greatest area of rain forests
New cards
86
Bacteria in soil
Responsible for "fixing" atmospheric nitrogen so it can be used for amino acids, DNA, etc.
New cards
87
The approximate efficiency of the conversion of light energy to chemical energy in photosynthesis
1%
New cards
88
resource partitioning
The division of environmental resources by coexisting species such that the niche of each species differs by one or more significant factors from the niches of all coexisting species. Example: Birds and seed size
New cards
89
Terrestrial biome
A geographic region categorized by a particular combination of average annual temperature, annual precipitation, and distinctive plant growth forms on land
New cards
90
Aquatic biome
an aquatic region characterized by a particular combination of salinity, depth, and water flow
New cards
91
Tundra
a cold and treeless biome with low growing vegetation
New cards
92
permafrost
an impermeable, permanently frozen layer of soil, found in tundra.
New cards
93
boreal forest
A forest biome made up primarily of coniferous evergreen trees that can tolerate cold winters and short growing seasons
New cards
94
temperate rainforest
a coastal biome typified by moderate temperatures and high precipitation
New cards
95
temperate seasonal forest
A biome with warm summers and cold winters, with over 1 meter of precipitation annually
New cards
96
Woodland aka
shrubland
New cards
97
woodland
a biome characterized by hot, dry summers and mild, rainy winters.
New cards
98
temperate grassland aka
cold desert
New cards
99
temperate grassland
A biome characterized by cold, harsh winters, and hot, dry summers.
New cards
100
tropical rainforest
a warm and wet biome found between 20 degrees N and 20 degrees S of the equator, with little seasonal temperature variation and high precipitation
New cards
robot