Zusammenfassung der Ressource
AP Environmental Science
- Introduction & History
- Environment
- The environment is
everything around us.
- This includes living and non-living
things such as air water and
energy.
- Ecology
- Ecology is the
biological science
that studies how
living things
ineract
- These things are called organisms.
- Ecosystems
- A set of organisms
within a defined area
or volume that
interact with one
another.
- EX. A forest consisting of plants.
- Three principles of
sustainability.
- dependence
on solar
energy
- Provides energy that
plants use to create
energy, energy
needed to sustain
other animals.
- Biodiversity.
- Variety of
genes,
organisms,
species, and
ecosystems
in which
organisms
exist and
interact.
- Chemical cycling.
- The circulation of
chemicals nessesary
for life from the
environment
through organisms
and back to the
environment.
- Earth Systems and Resources
- Weather
- Weather is a set of
physical conditions of the
lower atmosphere
- climate is the general pattern of
atmospheric conditions in a given area over
periods ranging from at least three decades
to thousands of years
- In other words it is the sum of weather conditions.
- The atmosphere.
- The atmosphere is a thin
spherical envelope of gases
surrounding the earths
surface
- The atmosphere consists of 21%
oxygen 78% nitrogen and 1%
water vapor.
- There are many parts to the
atmosphere. 1. troposphere
2.stratosphere 3.hydrosphere
4.geosphere 5.biosphere
- Global water
resources and use
- Salt water.
- salt water covers about 71% of
earths surface, and is about
98% of all of earths water.
- The oceans are
becoming contaminated
with CO2 and are killing
of coral reefs and
warming the oceans
- Fresh water
- Surface and groundwater
flow into lakes or other
bodies of water.
- Fresh water makes
up about 2.2% of
earths water.
- Ecosystem and Economic
services: Food, drinking water,
irrigation water, hydroelectricity,
transportation corridors,
recreations, employment, climate
moderation, nutrient cycling,
waste treatment, flood control,
groundwater recharge, habitats,
biodiversity, and scientific info.
- Some global
problems are
pollutants, over
use.
- Soil & soil
dynamics
- Rock cycle.
- The rock cycle is the
physical and chemical
processes that change
Earth's rocks into
another type of rock.
- Formation
of rocks.
- Heat, pressure, and stress turn sedimentary rock into
metamorphic rock. Then that rock can take two
different routes 1: It can be weathered or 2: it can turn
into magma at extreme heat. That magma then cools
into igneous rock and is then weathered back down
into sedimentary rock.
- chemical and
physical properties.
- Every rock or mineral has a different chemical
and physical composition. Some are maluable,
some ductile, and others harder or stronger.
For example: Copper is ductile and can be
stretched into wire.
- Problems
- Soil is very easy to erode and
displace. With this property if soil
gets wet it can wet and cause major
landslides.
- The living world
- Ecosystem structure
- At the moment humans are the supieor
population of organisms. There are many
communities on earth
- A community is a
bunch of different
species living in a
certain place.
- Key stone species
and species
diversity
- Keystone species are species whose roles
have a large effect on the types and
abundance of other species in an
ecosystem. E.X. American Alligator keeps
the fish population in check. Without
them the fish pop. will become
uncontrolable.
- Species diversity is the amount
of species a community holds.
This is important because if one
species goes extinct it could
ruin the whole ecosystem and
collapse.
- Ecological niche.
- This is a species way of life in a
community and includes everything
that affects its survival and
reproduction, such as how much water
and sunlight it needs, how much space
it requires, what it feeds on, what
feeds on it, and the tempuratures and
other conditions it can tolerate.
- Major terrestrial and
aquatic biomes
- Some major terrestrial biomes are
tropical rainforest, temperate
deciduous forest, evergreen
coniferous forest, arctic tundra, cold
desert. chaparral, temperate
grassland, temperate desert,
savanna, and tropical desert. Some
aquatic biomes are fresh and salt
waters.
- Energy flow
- The flow of energy
through a food web.
- Plants absorb chemical nutrients and the suns rays for
energy through photosynthesis, the consumers eat the
nutrient rich plants to gain energy themselves, once
the consumers die decomposers break down the animal
carcus to return nutrients to the ground and
atmosphere.
- Ecosystem pyramids.
- The more trophic levels there
are in a food chain or web,
the greater is the cumulative
loss of usable chemical
energy as it flows through
the trophic levels.
- Ecosystem diversity
- The variety of terrestrial
and aquatic ecosystems
found in an area or on the
earth.
- Each of these systems is a
storehouse of genetic and
species diversity
- Natural ecosystem change
- Climate shifts
- Climate has been changing over
thousands of years. The most recent
change is the warming of the
atmosphere.
- Species movements
- many species move to
different places, mainly
seasonally. This is called
migration.
- Natural biochemical cycles.
- Carbon cycle.
- Terrestrial producers remove CO2
from the atmosphere, then
decomposers carry out aerobic
resperation. This breaks down
glucose and other complex
compounds into CO2
- Nitrogen cycle.
- Nitrogen in the atmosphere becomes ammonia in the soil
through electrical storms, Then it either goes directly to
plants or becomes a nitrate in the soil. Then the plants uptake
the nitrogen, the nitrogen is then going into animals. After
the animals die decomposers turn the nitrogen back into
ammonia
- Phosphorus cycle.
- Phophates start in the deep ocean, do the the movement to tectonic
plates they find their way to the rocks on shore. Erosion then dissolves
the phosphates back into the water which will either go into ocean food
webs or get absorbed by plants then animals then released by
decomposers.
- Sulfer cycle.
- Sulfer starts int he rocks and then is either uptaken by plants or
dissolves in the ocean. When it dissolves into the ocean bacteria
creates a by-product called dimethyl sulfide and is released into
the atmosphere. Then sulfur is deposited by acid rain.
- water cycle.
- Water in oceans, surface, lakes, runoff,
rivers, and plants evaporates into the
atmosphere. The water then codinsates
in the atmosphere and falls back to earth
as precipitation.
- Conservation
of matter
- Matter cant be
created nor
destroyed.
- population.
- population biology concepts.
- Population ecology
- Every organism has a population of its species with some more
than others. E.X. the human population is about 8 million.
- Carrying capacity.
- The carrying capacity is the
maximum amount of species
an ecosystem can sustain.
- Reproductive strategy.
- If there are more births than deaths during a given
period of time, the Earths population increases,
and when the opposite is true, it decreases.
- survivorship.
- The only way to survive is to have a greater crude birth rate and
crude death rate to increase the population and thrive.
- Human population
- The human population is
about 8 million and is
expected to achieve about
10.8 billion in 2050.
- The average fetility rate is 2.5
- population
- Strategy for sustainibility.
- First of all the human population is over
the carrying capacity and is threatening the
sustainibility of other organisms. To try and
combat this could help countries develope.
If we can do this then the population will
shrink to a more reasonable size.
- Case studies.
- During the time between 1900 and 2012 the us
population increased from 76 million to 314
million. How did this happen? Between 1946
and 1964 the baby boom added 79 million
people to the U.S. population. In 1957 the
average TFR was 3.7 children then decresed to
2.1, but the population is still growing.
- The american baby boom
added 79 million to the U.S.
population. This generation
has greatly influenced the
economy because they
make up 36% of all adults.
- Impacts on population growth.
- Hunger and disease.
- People mainly in LDCs suffer from either malnutrition
or undernutrition. This increases the infant mortality
rate and the likely hood of catching a deadly disease.
- Economic effects.
- The strength of the economy can either cause death or
survival. If the economy of a country is strong then it is
able to feed its people and thrive as a community. If the
country has a poor economy then it struggles to feed its
people and causes famine and death.
- Resource use and
habitat destruction
- With the growing population of the
human population more and more
resources are being consumed faster
than they can be replenished. This can
lead to the destruction of one or many
different ecosystems.