APES Study Guide for 1st Semester Final Unit 1: Chapters 1, 2 (sections 1, 4 and 5) and 3 (sections 1-4) Terms to know: Sustainability Sustainable Yield GDP, per capita GDP Developed nations/developing nations Tragedy of the Commons (examples) Open access resource Renewable/nonrenewable Point source/ nonpoint source pollutants Anthropogenic Biodegradable/ nondegradable Entropy Synergy Time delays Tipping points Prokaryotic/eukaryotic Abiotic/biotic Range of tolerance Limiting factors Trophic level Autotroph/heterotroph Biomagnification Concepts: Be able to solve problems using dimensional analysis (review on website) Be able to state and explain the 1st Law of Thermodynamics (Law of Conservation of energy). Be able to state and explain the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics. Understand the implications of the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics on the transfer of energy in a food chain (why food chains form energy pyramids and how this relates to biomagnification, energy implications of eating higher on the food chain etc.) Evolution and Biodiversity: Chapter 4 and 9 Terms to know: Mutation Natural selection Artificial selection/selective breeding Adaptation Gene flow Genetic drift Divergent evolution Speciation Selective pressure Convergent evolution Coevolution Species diversity: species richness and evenness Niche vs. habitat Generalist vs. specialist species Endemic species Invasive (non-native, exotic, alien) species Keystone species Indicator species Resource partitioning (evolutionary process) Symbiotic relationships -Mutualism, Commensalism and Parasitism Primary vs. secondary succession Concepts: Be able to explain the requirement for natural selection: variability in the population due to mutations, heritability of trait, differential reproduction (differences in survival and or reproductive success due to favorable/unfavorable traits). Be able to explain the types of natural selection: directional, stabilizing and diversifying including how each of these affect the normal distribution of allele frequency (allele= form of gene). Be able to explain the advantages and disadvantages of generalist species and specialist species. Be able to give characteristics of extinction-prone species. Be able to explain the general trend after a disturbance from an immature ecosystem (early succession) to a mature ecosystem (late succession): (Figs. p. 116 and 117) Toxicology: Chapter 17 sections 3-5 Terms to know: Mutagens Carcinogens Teratogens Endocrine disruptor LD-50 TC-50 Threshold level Ppm and ppb Concepts to know: Be able to explain what a serial dilution is and be able to calculate the concentration of serial 10 fold dilutions. Be able to interpret dose-response curves and determine the LD-50 or TC-50 from the graph as well as threshold (if any). Be able to explain the common sources/uses of the following toxins: BPA, dioxin, lead, cadmium, mercury, phthalates, formaldehyde, PCB and DDT. Know that PCB and DDT are currently banned in the US but are very persistent chemicals. Know the most common metric prefixes (including micro and nano) and be able to determine concentrations that are ppm (1 mg/kg or 1 mg/L water) and ppb (1µg/kg or 1µg/ L water). Population Dynamics: Chapters 5.3 and 6 Terms to know: Population size and density Dispersion (random, uniform, clumped), Fig. 5-10 Age structure Age groups (pre-reproductive, reproductive, postreproductive) Biotic potential Intrinsic rate of growth (r) Logistic Growth Carrying capacity (K) Environmental resistance, Population cycles (irruptive, irregular, stable, cyclic) Habitat fragmentation Habitat corridors Immigration/Emigration Zero Population Growth Replacement level fertility Total fertility rate Concepts to know: Understand how scientists estimate the size of large populations and know how to solve a mark-andrecapture population estimate. Know the population dispersion types and which is most common Understand exponential growth and the relationship to intrinsic growth rate and biotic potential Know the shape of a logistic growth and be able to identify carrying capacity. (Fig. p. 112) Know factors that affect the carrying capacity, including revolutions in human evolution What happens when species exceed their carrying capacity? Be able to explain what r-strategists vs. K-strategists and identify examples of each. Know the advantages and disadvantages to each strategy. Survivorship curves for K and r-strategists Know the most populous countries/continents and fastest growing countries/continents Know how to calculate growth rate problems- given that birth and death rates are typically given per 1000 and growth rates are as a percentage. Know factors that affect US fertility— (what makes us different from other developed countries?) Know factors that affect life expectancy and birth, fertility, infant mortality, and death rates Differences in birth rates between developed and developing countries Be able to interpret age structure diagrams: what they look like for different types of population growth (Figs. p. 131) Understand the demographic Transition Model (preindustrial, transitional, industrial, postindustrial stages): birth vs. death rates for each of the 4 stages and why (Fig. p. 134) Ways governments can control/affect/reduce population growth Know the formula for the rule of 70, and know how to use this formula to calculate the doubling time of a population. Climate, Weather, and Biomes: Chapter 7 Terms to Know: Troposphere Climate Weather Water vapor capacity Specific Heat Convection cells (Hadley, Ferrell, Polar) Coriolis Effect Regional winds (westerlies, trade winds) Rain shadow Ocean Conveyor, Thermohaline circulation Upwelling El Niño La Niña Concepts to Know: Difference between climate and weather Cause of seasons: relationship between Earth’s tilt and position relative to the sun Differential heating of land vs. water: relationship to specific heat of water, and effect of this differential heating on heating of air above land and water Relationship between high and low pressure areas and amount of precipitation. (Fig. p. 143) Effect of temperature on water vapor capacity and how increasing altitude reduces air’s ability to hold water vapor because air usually cools as it rises Be able to explain convection cells. Know the driving force of the Hadley cell. Know general latitude locations of rising and sinking air. Be able to identify low pressure and high pressure zones created by convection cells. Relate this pattern with the location of rainforests and deserts. (Fig. p. 144) Coriolis Effect: deflection in each hemisphere Global wind pattern on Earth: Interaction of convection cell air movement and Coriolis Effect Ocean conveyor belt: driving force of current at pole and Gulf Stream portion of current pattern Upwelling: causes and effects on weather and marine ecosystems El Niño causes and effects Biomes: Know major biomes general temperature and precipitation trends (Figs. p. 146 and 147) Global Warming: Chapter 19 (Sections 1-3) Concepts to Know: Be able to name the major sources of the following greenhouse gases: carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (NO2), halocarbons/ floridated compounds (CFC’s, HCFC’s), tropospheric ozone (ground-level O3), soot (particulate black carbon) and water vapor (H2O). Be able to explain the Keeling curve for CO2 in the atmosphere, knowing the upward trend since the Industrial Revolution and the cause of the seasonal fluctuations. Be able to define carbon sink (reservoir) and be able to explain three ways that the ocean serves as a carbon sink as well as major terrestrial carbon sinks. Be able to explain the effect of increasing dissolved carbon dioxide on the ocean’s pH, the reason for the effect and the implications for this change (esp. for organisms with shells). Be able to define positive and negative feedback loops and be able to identify possible feedback loops for global warming. Be able to explain the basics of the Kyoto Protocol