Table of Contents

APES Study Guide

Unit 1: The Living World - Ecosystems

Resource Availability

Species Relation

General notes

Competition

Interspecies interaction

Ecosystems

BiomeAnnual Rainfall, Soil TypeMajor VegetationWorld Location
Deciduous forest70-25 cm; rich soil with high organic contentHardwood treesN America, Europe, AUS, E Asia
Tropical rainforest200-400 cm; poor quality soilTall trees with lower limbs, vines, epiphytes, plants adapted to low light intensityS America, W AFR, SE Asia
Grasslands10-60 cm; rich soilSod-forming grassesN American plains and prairies; RUS steppes; S AFR vels; Argentinean pampas
Coniferous forest20-60 cm; mostly in summer; soil is acidic due to vegetationConiferous treesNorthern N America; N Eurasia
TundraLess than 25 cm; soil is permafrostHerbaceous plantsNorthern latitudes of N America, Europe, and RUS
Chaparral50-75 cm; mostly in winter; soil is shallow and infertileSmall trees with large hard leaves, spiny shrubsW N America; Mediterranean regions
DesertsLess than 25 cm; soil has a coarse texture (ex. sandy)Cactus, other low-water adapted plants30° north and south of equator

Energy

Food chains/food webs

Producers

Consumers

Food chains

Biogeochemical cycles

Water cycle

Carbon cycle

Nitrogen cycle

Phosphorus cycle

Sulfur cycle

Freshwater

Vertical stratification

Barrier islands

Oceans

Unit 2: The Living World - BioD

Biodiversity

Evolution

Ecosystem change

Ecological succession

Island biogeography

Loss of Biodiversity (Humans)

ActivityExplanationSolution
Clearing land for construction, homes, roads• Reduces habitat for many species
• Results in habitat fragmentation
• Cluster development
• Smart growth planning
• Develop urban boundaries
• Habitat conservation areas
Logging, clear cutting, deforestation• Reduces habitat for many species
• Results in habitat fragmentation
• Replant trees
• Selective cutting
Agriculture
• Monoculture/GMOs
• Clearing forests to create pastureland
• Pesticide use
• Eliminates native species; decreases genetic variation
• Reduces habitat for many species
• Eliminates native species and beneficial organisms
• Encourage polyculture, agroforestry, intercropping
• Require GMO crops to be sterile
• Create wildlife, habitat corridors
• Grow shade-tolerant crops
• Implement IPM techniques, biological pest controls
Overfishing, hunting, overhunting, poaching• Reduces keystone species
• Reduces top predators
• Depletes endangered species
• Regulate activities
• Establish quotas
• Enforce existing laws (ESA)
• Ban trade (CITES)
Water contamination by
• Excess fertilizer
• Runoff from feedlots
• Runoff from construction
• Untreated sewage
• Overloads sediments and nutrients
• Decreases dissolved O2 (only certain species can survive)
• Regulate non-point sources of water pollution (ex. Buffer zones, swales, containment ponds, stormwater treatment areas)
• Secondary or tertiary treatment
Burning of fossil fuels• Climate change: death of coral reefs, loss of reef habitat, increases sea level with resulting loss of coastal habitat
• Acid rain: increases acidity of freshwater systems (only certain species can survive)
• Climate change: implement the kyoto protocol, carbon sequestration, carbon cap and trade, carbon tax, switch to renewable energy sources
• Acid rain: require scrubbers on coal burning power plants, switch to renewable energy sources
Introduction of invasive species• displaces native species• Checkpoints for agricultural inspections
• Tighter enforcement on import of horticultural or exotic species
• Edu regarding strategies to prevent invasives
Dams/hydroelectric plants• Fragments habitat• Steps to allow fish migration
Surface mining• Destroys habitat• Enforce surface mining and reclamation act

Threatened and endangered species

DateLawWhat It Did
1972Marine mammal Protection ActProtected marine mammals from falling below their optimum sustainable pop levels
1973Endangered Species Act Program for the protection of threatened plants and animals and their habitatsProhibited the commerce of those species considered to be endangered or threatened
1973Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna (CITES)Bans capture, exportation, sale of endangered and threatened species

Unit 3: Populations

Population description

Population growth

Population cycles

Human populations

FactorIncr Life Expectancy
Incr access to HCFewer deaths from treatable diseases; prevention of early death by vaccines
Improve food qual/quantityBetter health resulting in less malnut or fewer early deaths; decr in food borne diseases
Incr access to clean waterFewer water-borne and communicable diseases
Fewer pregnanciesFewer children = fewer maternal deaths
Incr health-related eduBetter sanitation, less diseases transmission
FactorDecr Fertility Rate
Incr female eduFewer children; later age at first reproduction; aware of choices for fam planning
Econ opp for womenFewer children; later age at first reproduction; less dependence on males
Later marriage age for womenFewer children; later age at first reproduction
Incr access to fam planningFewer children; confidence that children will survive to adulthood
Incr gender eqAccess to fam planning; financially less dependent on males; choice in reproduction
Incr econ devChildren no long asset → financial liability
Social programs for elderlyChildren no longer need to support old parents

Demographic transition model

States

  1. Pre-industrial state
    1. Population exhibits slow rate of growth
    2. Harsh living conditions- high birth rate and high death rate
    3. Environmental resistance: conditions that slow a pop growth (ex. harsh living conditions)
  1. Transitional state
    1. Birth rates high
    2. Due to better good, water, and HC, death rates are lower
    3. Rapid pop growth
  1. Industrial state
    1. Pop growth state is still fairly high
    2. Birth rate drops → similar to death rate
    3. Many dev countries are currently in this state
  1. Postindustrial state
    1. Pop approaches and reaches a zero growth rate
    2. Pop can drop below zero growth rate (RUS, S AFR, JAP)

Humans on earth

Increase pop

Resources

Sustainability

Unit 4: Earth Systems & Resources

Tectonic plates

Plate boundaries

Volcanoes

Earthquakes

Soil

General notes

Types

Acidity

Weathering

Soil layers/horizons

Monoculture (humans)

Soil erosion

Soil conservation

Soil laws

Atmosphere

General notes

Troposphere

Stratosphere

Mesosphere

Thermosphere

Climate

General notes

Air circulation

Convection currents

Hadley cell

Weather events

Monsoons

Tropical storms

Hurricanes

ENSO events

El Niño

La Niño

Seasons

Wind

General notes

Trade winds

Westerly

Polar easterlies

Horse latitudes

Doldrums

Unit 5: Land & Water Use

Agriculture

General notes

Slash and burn

Fertilizers and pesticides

Irrigation

Integrated pest management

Genetically engineered plants

Monoculture

Soil degradation

Meat production

Urban runoff

Forest resources

General notes

Deforestation

Change in Water QualityDeforestation Efx
Incr in water tempLoss of shade; incr solar radiation reaching the stream
Incr in sediment/turbidityLoss of root struc, leaf litter, canopy leads to incr soil erosion and runoff
Incr in nutrient concentrationLoss of vegetation results in less nutrient uptake and subsequent runoff into stream
Decr in pHLoss of root struc allows naturally occurring acids to run off into streams
Decr in dissolved oxygenLoss of shade lads to warmer water, holds less dissolved oxygen

Forest policy

DateName of LawWhat it Does
1964Wilderness ActEst a review of road-free areas of 5k+ acres and island within the national wildlife refuges or the national park system for inclusioni the national preservation system (restricted activities there)
1968Wild and Scenic Rivers ActEst a national wild and scenic rivers sys for the protection of rivers with important scenic, recreational, fish and wildlife, and other values

Natural events

Ocean resources

General notes

Overfishing

Threatened aquatic ecosystems

Legislation

DateName of LegislationWhat it Did
1965Anadromous fish conservation actProtected fish that live in the sea but grow up and breed in freshwater
1976Magnuson fishery conservation and management actGoverned the conservation and management of ocean fishing
1972Marine mammal protection actConserve marine mammals
1972Endangered speciesProvided broad protection for species of fish, wildlife, and plants that are listed as threatened or endangered in the US or elsewhere
1982UN agreement for implementation of the provisions of UNCLOSSet out the principles for the conservation and management of certain types of fish
1975CITES (convention on int’l trade in endangered species of wild fauna and flora)An int’l agreement b/t governments that ensured that int’l trade in specimens of wild organisms don’t threaten survival

Water importance

General notes

Env MPX

Water rights

Mining

General notes

Env MPX

Regulations

DateName of LegislationPurpose
1872Mining ActGoverned prospecting and mining of minerals on publicly owned land
1920Mineral Leasing ActPermitted the Bureau of Land Management to grant leases for dev of coal, phosphate, potahs, sodium, sulphur, and other leasable mineral deposits on public domain lands
1980Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (Superfund)Reg damage done by mining
1976Resource Conservation and Recovery Acts (RCRA)Reg some mineral processing wastes
1977Surface Mining Control And Reclamation ActEst a program for reg surface coal mining and reclamation activities; est mandatory standards for these activities on state and fed lands, incl a req that adverse MPX on fish, wildlife, and related env values be minimized

Unit 6: Energy Resources & Consumption

Overview

General notes

Laws of thermodynamics

  1. First Law of Thermodynamics: energy can neither be created nor destroyed; it can only be transferred and transformed (ex. photosynthesis: radiant energy is converted to chem energy in the form of bonds that hold together atoms in carbs)
  1. Second Law of Thermodynamics: entropy (disorder) of the universe is increasing
    1. In most energy transformations, a sig fraction of energy is lost to the universe as heat
    2. Ex. 10% rule

Resources

Fossil fuels

General notes

Oil

Coal

Natural gas

Nuke energy

General notes

Types of reactors

Safety issues

Safety IssueDescription
MeltdownReactor loses coolant water → hot core melts through the containment building → radioactive materials could then get into groundwater
ExplosionGases generated by a uncontrolled core burst containment vessel and spread radioactive materials in the environment
Nuke weaponsSome by-products of fission reaction can be remade into fission “dirty” bombs- spread damaging radioactive isotopes
Highly radioactive wasteNo longer usable cores, piping, and spent fuel rods need to be stored for may centuries → “spent” fuel have radioactive elements like plutonium-239 (half-life: 2.13 * 106 years)
Thermal pollutionWater used to cool turbines is returned to local bodies of water at a much higher temp than when it was removed
Radioactive elementsGamma rays produced by radioactive decay can damage cells and DNA → breast, thyroid, stomach, leukemia cancer (harms immune system)
Concern for one’s safetySuffer mental stress, anxiety, depression caused by concerns for their safety → Not In My Backyard Syndrome (NIMBY)

Renewable energy

Biomass

Hydroelectric energy

Solar energy

Wind energy

Geothermal energy

Ocean tides

Hydrogen cells

Energy conservation

Env policy

Major acts

DateLegislationPurpose
1970National Env Policy ActCreated council on env quality which resulted in the creation of the EPA; fed agencies must prep env MPX statements
1983Int’l Env Protection ActAuthorized POTUS to assist countries in protecting and maintaining wildlife habitats and dev wildlife management and plant conservation programs; est sanctuaries, reserves, parks, anti-poaching measures
1990Pollution Prevention ActPromote source reduction of pollution
1990Env Edu ActEst Office of Env Edu within the EPA to dev and administer a fed env edu program

Green taxes

Int’l agreements

DateAgreementPurpose
1978Montreal AccordCut emissions of CFCs that damage ozone layer
1992Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous WastesProtect human health and env against adverse efx resulting from generation, management, transboundary movements and disposal of hazardous and other wastes (US has not ratified)
1997Kyoto ProtocolMembers must cut their GHG emissions back to 5% below 1990 levels (US has not ratified)

**Unit 7-8: Atmospheric, Terrestrial and Aquatic Pollution**

attach to the surface of plants, soil and water

**Unit 9: Global Change**

Global WarmingGreenhouse Gas Concentration

Greenhouse Gas Pre-Industrial Level In 2016
Carbon Dioxide, CO2 280 ppm 400 ppm
Methane, CH4 715 ppb 1,840 ppb
Nitrous Oxides, N2O 270 ppb 328 ppb

●  Effects of Climate Change: What’s Coming?Physical Changes ●  Decrease of glaciers and ice sheets

    ●  Continued rising of average ocean levels    
    ●  Changes in precipitation   
    ●  Increase in frequency and duration of storms    
    ●  Increase in number of hot days    
    ●  Decrease in number of cold days    

Changes in Biota ●  Increased crop yields in cold environments

  ●  Loss of croplands due to drought and higher temperatures    
  ●  Cold-tolerant species will need to migrate to cooler climates    
  ●  Heat-tolerant species may spread and invade new habitats    
  ●  Additional deaths from water and insect-borne diseases    
  ●  Commerce, transport, and coastal settlements may be disrupted by    
  changes in ocean levels and storms   
  ●  Change in marine ecosystems and fishery productivity    

○  Adaptations to the Warmer Climate ●  Must occur at many levels of society

  ●Develop new technology   
  ●  Continue to reduce emissions from engines    
  ●  Legislative and behavioral changes needed    
  ●Promote sustainable growth   

Reducing Climate ChangeTechnological ●Carbon sequestration

    ●  Reduction of emissions from engines    

Behavioral ●  Turning off the lights to conserve electricity ○Policy ●  Enacting new treaties and legislation