RNR 160 Quiz 1 Study Guide
RNR 160 Quiz 1 Study Guide
RNR 160 Quiz 1 Study Guide
● Biodiversity is a variety of organisms that exist and reflects the response of species to
their environments.
● Between 15,000 and 18,000 new species are identified each year, with about half of
those being insects.
● The growing human population has led to increased competition between us and other
species.
● An ecosystem is the interactions between species and the environment.
● About 80% of medical drugs are derived from plants and microbes.
● You gain more energy from the food you consume by eating lower (plants) on the food
chain.
● The more biodiversity, the more stable, productive, and _____an ecosystem is.
● Four of the five previous mass extinctions were directly related to atmospheric carbon
dioxide.
● It is predicted that 20,000 (33%) of tropical plants in Africa could go extinct by 2050.
● We are currently in the Holocene geologic epoch.
● The climate of the Pleistocene was much colder and drier than today
● Early humans migrated into North America through the Bering Straits.
● Pleistocene animals might have evolved to be so large to cope with less food and colder
conditions.
● When the ice sheets melted, shifted, and retreated, that freed up much of the Earth’s
water.
● During the Pleistocene extinction event some animals like birds survived and thrived.
● Bringing back the mammoth might help stave off climate change because their trampling
is thought to prevent the release of carbon dioxide from the permafrost.
● It is believed that much of the Amazon reverted to savanna and montane forest after the
retreat of the glaciers.
● Permafrost contains vast amounts of carbon from dead plant life that is locked away by
the extremely cold temperatures.
● Science is a process using observation and experimentation by which we try to
understand the world.
● Early naturalists had trouble classifying organisms that were very similar in some
features but really different in others features.
● One observation that supports natural selection is that there is better (?) survival of
individuals based on differences in traits.
● The strength of natural selection depends on the amount of pressure by the environment
acting on organisms.
● How an animal's behavior and body helps it survive, or live, in its environment is called
adaptation.
● There are over 350,000 beetle species described.
● A butterfly that looks toxic but is not actually toxic is called a mimic.
● In response to climate change some animals are changing their ranges, sex ratios, and
tolerance to heat.
● Monarch butterfly migration has been delayed by up to six weeks due to higher
temperatures.
● Some migrating birds are laying their eggs earlier to match insect availability so their
young will have food.
● On average, birds and mammals adapt quicker to changing temperatures.
● Ecological niche describes the range of conditions from resources to competitors that a
species can tolerate.
● Indigenous people tend to regard animals as spirit beings, who can be appealed to for
help and protection.
● Paleolithic (hunter-gatherer) obtained food directly from “natural” ecosystems by hunting
wild animals and collecting wild plants.
● In some indigenous groups property is usually held by clans rather than individuals.
● Fire (swidden?) is a farming technique that clears forests and fertilizes soil.
● The preservation of traditional forms of farming knowledge and practices help maintain
biodiversity, enhance food security, and protect the world’s natural resources.
● TEK is not just a system of knowledge and practice; it is an integrated system of
knowledge, practice, and beliefs.
● A traditional method to grow crops on difficult landscapes is called terracing.
● Biocultural diversity links biological and cultural systems.
● The U.S. Supreme Court, however, has consistently upheld the off-reservation hunting
and fishing rights of indigenous people.
● Indigenous people continue to have assets such as their land, cultural resources, and
genetic sequences of crops stolen.
● ___ is most painful when your reality is so close to your perceived desire and it does not
align.
● Primary emotions are shared across organisms and can be mixed to form more complex
ones like grief, nostalgia, and humility.
● Re-appraisal, or cognitively redefining the emotion to something more positive, is
associated with greater resilience, social ties, and self-esteem.
● Cultural transmission through stories, songs, and visual art helps humans learn about
emotional responses without ever experiencing the situation personally.
● Strong primary emotions help us remember a landscape and orient ourselves to home.
● Each society and individual has a suite of nature ethics, the right and the wrong ways to
interact with nature.
● The manifest destiny is the most influential ideology in our nation’s history.
● Preservation believes that decisions should be made that benefits all ecosystems and
species therein.
● Conservation believes that decisions should be made that protect environments and
provide services and products to humans.
● Moving from an anthropocentric to ecocentric worldview will take both cognitive and
emotional changes in humans.