APES: Study Guide for Cumulative Final
FINAL EXAM is May 10/11
Optional in-class retake is May 19/20
IMPORTANT PROCESSES/MODELS: Be able to explain, diagram, and give examplesof EACH of these. For environmental issues, always think of human health, ecosystems, and economics.
•Food Webs and Food Chains (arrow direction shows flow of Energy!)
•Ecosystem Interactions (mutualism, commensalism, parasitism, predation)
•Ecosystem pyramid models (biomass, trophic)
•Important Species (Keystone, Invasive, Indicator, Foundation)
•Succession (primary and secondary)
•Age Structure Diagrams
•Demographic Transition
•Photosynthesis and Cellular respiration
•Convection currents in the atmosphere (Hadley, Ferrell, and Polar cells)
•Biogeochemical Cycles (Nitrogen, Hydrologic, Carbon, Sulfur, Phosphorous)
•Zones of Ocean Life
•Aquatic biomes (marine, riparian, estuaries, wetlands, lakes)
•Terrestrial Biomes and latitude
(Tropical Rainforests, Tropical Grasslands, Deserts, Savannah, Grasslands, Temperate Rainforests, Temperate Deciduous Forest, Taiga/Boreal forest, Tundra, Polar Ice Caps)
- Layers of the Atmosphere
- Layers of the soil and soil conservation
- Layers of the Earth and Plate Tectonics
- Sustainable and non-sustainable food production (plants, animals, and fish!!)
- Sustainable and non-sustainable forestry
- Water pollution and resources (don’t forget drought!)
- Greenhouse Effect and Global Climate Change
- Stratospheric Ozone Depletion
- Bioassay/LD50
- Nonrenewable and renewable energy sources (Coal, Oil, Natural Gas, Nuclear, Biomass, Solar, Wind, Hydro, Geothermal, Hydrogen fuel cell)
- Energy conservation and efficiency
- Electricity production
- Waste types and waste management (include wastewater!)
- Urbanization and urban sprawl
- Strategies for sustainable cities.
- Strategies for ecological remediation
- Strategies for reducing ecological footprint
- Experimental Design (independent variable, dependent variable, control, data analysis, graphing, drawing conclusions)
- Pollution: types, effects, impacts.
FORMULAS (mathematical and chemical)
I = PAT
Rule of 70: Doubling Time = ______70______
Growth rate in percent
population change = (birthrate +immigration) – (deathrate + emigration)
Rate of population change = birthrate-deathrate
10
Percent Change = initial-new X 100
initial
C6H12O6 + 6O2 → 6CO2 + 6 H2O
6CO2 + 6 H2O → C6H12O6 + 6O2
Acid deposition: NO + ½ O2 → NO2; 2 NO2 + H2O → HNO2 + HNO3; SO2+ H2O → H2SO3; H2SO3 + ½ O2 → H2SO4
Ammonia → Nitrite → nitrate (nitrogen fixing!)
Other chemical elements, compounds and molecules to recognize**:
NaCl, SO2, H2SO4, HCl, CO2, CO, CH4, H2, O2, O3, N, P, K, Hg, Pb, Cu, Cl, NO2, N2O, H2O, CFCs, U-235,C6H12O6
**Connect to Air, Water, and Land!
VOCABULARY and CONCEPTS: Start by going through and highlighting the words or concepts you do not remotely remember. Then learn them. Use this list to keep track of what you know and need to re-learn by checking or crossing off words you are fully confident in, and can completely describe to another person. Be sure you can give an example for each and explain how the different concepts interact and connect.
LAND
soil
weathering (biological, chemical, physical)
soil horizons
humus
leaching
alkaline
acidic
clay
sand
silt
permeability
agriculture
irrigation
salinization
erosion
soil compaction
Green Revolution
subsistence agriculture
intercropping
sustainable agriculture
aquaculture
hydroponics
pesticide
herbicide
fertilizer
Integrated Pest Management (IPM)
GMO (Genetically Modified Organism)
drip irrigation
rangeland
overgrazing
pasture
surface mining
mountaintop removal
strip mining
open-pit mining
Ore
Reclamation
Tailings
old-growth forest
selective cutting
strip cutting
clear cutting
deforestation
desertification
WATER
Marine
Riparian
Saltwater
Freshwater
Brackish water
Zooplankton
Phytoplankton
Benthos
Decomposers
Coral Reef
Open Sea
Estuary
Intertidal Zone
Pelagic zone
Euphotic Zone
Bathyal Zone
Abyssal Zone
Continental Shelf
Hydrothermal vent
Thermohaline circulation
ENSO
Salinity
Watershed
Ocean Acidification
Hypoxia
Eutrophication
Point source Pollution
Nonpoint source pollution
Dissolved Oxygen (DO)
Littoral zone
Benthic zone
Wetland
AIR
indoor air pollution
primary pollutant
secondary pollutant
stratospheric ozone layer
ozone depletion
chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)
Chapman reactions (be specific!)
UV radiation
infrared radiation
hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs)
industrial smog
photochemical smog
temperature inversion
volatile organic compounds (VOCs)
acid deposition (wet and dry)
aerosols
particulate matter (PM)
Clean Air Act
criteria pollutants (be specific)
atmospherelayers
climate
weather
greenhouse effect
greenhouse gases (be specific!!)
global warming
climate change
albedo
hurricane
cryoconite
proxy data
paleoclimatology
Kyoto Protocol
Montreal Protocol
sea level rise
ocean acidification
Global Air Circulation
HUMAN POPULATION
carrying capacity
consumer (economic)
HDI (Human Development Index)
limiting factor
doubling time
exponential growth
linear growth
demographic transition
family planning
Age Structure Diagram
IMR (Infant Mortality Rate)
TFR (Total Fertility Rate)
(crude) Death rate
(crude) Birth rate
urbanization
globalization
TOXICOLOGY
Toxicology
Bioassay
Serial Dilution
Synergistic effect
Radon
Bioaccumulation
Biomagnification
LD50
WASTE
Solid waste
municipal waste
industrial waste
sanitary landfill
incineration
electronic waste
hazardous waste
CERCLA
RCRA
brownfield
Superfund
recycling
waste to energy
ECOLOGY
Community
Ecosystem
Population
Ecology
Abiotic factors
Biotic factors
Range of tolerance
Limiting factor
Trophic level
Trophic pyramid
Producers (autotrophs)
Photosynthesis
Chemosynthesis
Consumers (heterotrophs)
Omnivore
Carnivores
Herbivore
Decomposer
Biomass
Habitat
Biodiversity
Ecological niche/ “niche”
Native species
Nonnative species
Invasive species
Indicator species
Keystone species
Pioneer species
Climax species
Interspecific Competition
Intraspecific Competition
Predation (predator-prey)
Parasitism
Mutualism
Commensalism
Ecological niche
Resource partitioning
Biogeochemical cycles (5 of them!)
Primary Succession
Secondary Succession
ENERGY
renewable resources
nonrenewable resources
fossil fuels
crude oil
petroleum products
natural gas
tar sands
British Thermal Unit (BTU)
Watt
Kilowatt hour
Energy
Energy efficiency
Second law of thermodynamics
First law of thermodynamics
solar power
passive solar energy
active solar energy
photovoltaic cell
hydrogen fuel cell
wind power
geothermal energy
biomass energy
ethanol
Hydrogen fuel cell
Uranium–235
nuclear fission
nuclear fusion
radioactive waste
Radiation
Work
hydraulic fracturing (fracking)
electricity
generator
turbine
tidal power
hydroelectricdam
Keystone XL pipeline
bioremediation
oil slick
EARTH SCIENCE
Biome
Convection Cell
Latitude
Altitude
Evolution
Natural Selection
Mutation
Adaptation
monsoon
polar
temperate
tropical
geology
core
mantle
crust (oceanic and continental)
tectonic plates
lithosphere
subduction
transform fault
convergent plate boundary
divergent plate boundary
glaciers
erosion
the rock cycle
igneous rock
magma
sedimentary rock
metamorphic rock
ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS
Ethical Consumerism
Eco-apartheid
Eco-equity
Environmental justice
Environmental racism
3 waves of environmentalism
Tragedy of the Commons
sustainable development
NIMBY
utilitarian
conservation
preservation
stewardship
anthropocentric
Deep Ecology
preservation
natural capital
Tips for an A on this test (and a 5 on the AP Exam!):
- Study actively. Come to tutoring. Ask Questions. Meet with your study group. Make flash cards. Make flow charts or models, like the one we did for climate change. Teach each other concepts until you can do it without looking at your book, phone, or notes.
- Study early. The time to start studying for this exam is not April 21st. It is now. If you set aside 30 minutes every day, or a solid 45 every other day, you will be fine.
- Study together. You have a study group assignment, so use it! You are literally getting class credit for helping each other prepare for this exam. Don’t pass it up.
- Study completely. Don’t just say, “I sort of have this.” Make sure that you are as prepared as you can possibly be, and you will have no regrets.
- Set a timer.Marathon study sessions can be exhausting. You will learn more if you set timers and take breaks.
- Connect.In Howard’s End, EM Forester says “Only connect!” Make sure that you are connecting every concept to other concepts we have learned.
- Practice, practice, practice.Use notes, labs, activities, and the textbook; the class website;and the practice Free Response questions on collegeboard.com to prepare.
- Reward Yourself: This is a large task! Reward yourself with snacks, your favorite TV show, a new pair of shoes. Get your parents/guardians to chip in! Tell them it’s for your education.
- Believe in Yourself: It may seem like a lot when you put it on 2 pages, but you KNOW this stuff. You have done SO much work this year, and it’s in your brain somewhere. You just have to practice accessing and connecting it and putting it in words.