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Environmental Science Toward a Sustainable Future 12th Edition By Wright - Test Bank

Environmental Science Toward a Sustainable Future 12th Edition By Wright - Test Bank   Instant Download - Complete Test Bank With Answers     Sample Questions Are Posted Below   Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future, 12e (Wright) Chapter 5   Ecosystems: Energy, Patterns, and Disturbance   1) In 2010, Iceland's Eyjafjallajokull volcano erupted. One of …

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Environmental Science Toward a Sustainable Future 12th Edition By Wright – Test Bank

 

Instant Download – Complete Test Bank With Answers

 

 

Sample Questions Are Posted Below

 

Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future, 12e (Wright)

Chapter 5   Ecosystems: Energy, Patterns, and Disturbance

 

1) In 2010, Iceland’s Eyjafjallajokull volcano erupted. One of the results was that

  1. A) devastating erosion sculpted the land into large ravines.
  2. B) most cattle and horses were killed by toxic gases.
  3. C) grasses were covered by ash and were unfit for livestock to eat.
  4. D) parasitic diseases spread quickly through livestock populations.

Answer:  C

Diff: 1

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

 

2) The eruption of Mt. Pinatubo in the Philippines

  1. A) affected only local, island ecosystems.
  2. B) produced large amounts of sulfur dioxide but few aerosols.
  3. C) produced aerosols that blocked the sun and resulted in a drop in global temperatures.
  4. D) caught the human populations unaware, giving no prior signs of activity.

Answer:  C

Diff: 2

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

 

3) Volcanoes are triggered by

  1. A) changes in solar radiation.
  2. B) movement of tectonic plates.
  3. C) human mining activities.
  4. D) major changes in climate.

Answer:  B

Diff: 2

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

 

4) In the aftermath of Mt. Pinotubo’s eruption, local effects

  1. A) included acid rain, erosion, and mudslides.
  2. B) subsided after a few days.
  3. C) on climate have produced numerous extinctions.
  4. D) on soils have left most of the Philippines without fertile soil.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

 

5) Biomes characterize regions with similar types of

  1. A) vegetation and climatic conditions.
  2. B) animals and plants.
  3. C) soil, water systems, and animals.
  4. D) rocks, soil, minerals, and water.

Answer:  A

Diff: 1

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

6) In general,

  1. A) food chains consist of many interrelated food webs.
  2. B) food chains are interconnected to form food webs.
  3. C) food webs consist of either consumers or producers.
  4. D) food webs usually consists of 8-10 trophic levels.

Answer:  B

Diff: 2

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

7) Energy is

  1. A) lost in the form of heat as energy is passed up a food chain.
  2. B) added in the form of heat as energy is passed up a food chain.
  3. C) lost in the form of carbon dioxide as energy is passed up a food chain.
  4. D) added in the form of heat as carbon dioxide is passed down a food chain.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

8) A large oak tree with its abundant leaves glimmering in the sun on an early fall morning represents

  1. A) a heterotrophic producer.
  2. B) an autotrophic consumer.
  3. C) a heterotrophic consumer.
  4. D) an autotrophic producer.

Answer:  D

Diff: 2

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

9) Bison grazing on grasses growing in a meadow represent

  1. A) a consumer eating a producer.
  2. B) a predator eating a consumer.
  3. C) anaerobic metabolism.
  4. D) two producers exchanging energy.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

10) Dung beetles feeding on the waste of cattle grazing on hay in a field represent

  1. A) a decomposer feeding on the wastes of a consumer eating a producer.
  2. B) a producer feeding on the wastes of a producer eating a consumer.
  3. C) a producer feeding on the wastes of a consumer eating a producer.
  4. D) a consumer feeding on the wastes of a decomposer eating a producer.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

11) ________ play a crucial role in returning nutrients essential for plant growth to the soil.

  1. A) Chemical decomposers
  2. B) Herbivores
  3. C) Parasites
  4. D) Producers

Answer:  A

Diff: 1

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

Deep in the ocean off the shore of Japan are communities nestled around hydrothermal vents where super-heated water springs from the bottom of the ocean. No sunlight ever penetrates to these deep regions. In these communities, bacteria have special enzymes that allow them to form organic matter by chemosynthesis. These communities frequently have worms, clams, shrimp, and many other organisms clustered together.

 

12) In such a system, fish feed on shrimp that feed on the bacteria. This food chain represents a

  1. A) tertiary consumer eating a secondary consumer eating a primary consumer.
  2. B) primary consumer eating a secondary consumer eating a tertiary consumer.
  3. C) consumer eating a producer which then consumes chemoautotrophic bacteria.
  4. D) secondary consumer eating a primary consumer which then eats a producer.

Answer:  D

Diff: 2

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

13) Hydrothermal vent communities are unusual because

  1. A) a primary producer synthesizes organic matter.
  2. B) a producer exists without sunlight.
  3. C) a consumer eats a producer.
  4. D) there are no producers in the ecosystem.

Answer:  B

Diff: 3

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

14) In this unusual ecosystem,

  1. A) there is no photosynthesis.
  2. B) no energy is transferred between trophic levels.
  3. C) temperature is the most important biotic factor.
  4. D) producers eat consumers.

Answer:  A

Diff: 3

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

 

15) In hydrothermal vent communities, we would not expect to find

  1. A) carbon compounds.
  2. B) chemosynthesis.
  3. C) chlorophyll.
  4. D) producers.

Answer:  C

Diff: 3

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

16) A raccoon spends its week eating raspberries, grain, eggs, and grasshoppers. Raccoons are therefore

  1. A) carnivores.
  2. B) omnivores.
  3. C) herbivores.
  4. D) producers.

Answer:  B

Diff: 2

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

17) To feed its young, an owl captures mice that eat grains. The owl also eats small snakes that feed on these mice. The diet of owls represents the roles of

  1. A) a primary and secondary consumer.
  2. B) a secondary and tertiary consumer.
  3. C) an herbivore and a carnivore.
  4. D) a producer and a consumer.

Answer:  B

Diff: 2

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

18) Examine the food web described by this figure. What would happen if the population of zooplankton decreased suddenly by 80% and stayed low for several years?

  1. A) the arctic cod population would decrease
  2. B) the phytoplankton population would decrease
  3. C) the bearded seal population would increase
  4. D) the beluga whale population would increase

Answer:  A

Diff: 3

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

19) Examine the food web described by this figure. Which of the following organisms is at the highest trophic level?

  1. A) carnivorous zooplankton
  2. B) small fish
  3. C) beluga whale
  4. D) arctic terns

Answer:  C

Diff: 2

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

20) In a forest, deer, raccoons, squirrels, and other animals eat and find shelter. A detrital food web occurs as their wastes accumulate on the forest floor. In this detrital web,

  1. A) deer and raccoons function as the producers.
  2. B) fungi and earthworms function as producers.
  3. C) decomposers function as consumers.
  4. D) the deer and raccoons represent decomposers.

Answer:  C

Diff: 2

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

21) You are enjoying a salad with lettuce coated by mushrooms, tomatoes, carrots, and bits of bacon from grain-fed pigs. Your salad represents

  1. A) producers, consumers, and decomposers.
  2. B) only producers and consumers.
  3. C) only producers and carnivores.
  4. D) only producers.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

22) Cattle and termites both have symbiotic microorganisms living in their digestive tracts that help these animals by

  1. A) digesting cellulose.
  2. B) producing oxygen.
  3. C) producing large organic molecules.
  4. D) releasing kilocalories.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

23) In the fall, Rose bought some fresh apple cider without preservatives sold by the local orchard. After several weeks stored in the refrigerator, Rose noticed the taste of alcohol in the cider. Friends later told her that she had accidentally made hard cider. Rose wondered how this could happen, and then her friends explained. After some time, natural yeast in her cider

  1. A) broke down the glucose and made alcohol by fermentation.
  2. B) produced glucose by the process of alcoholic fermentation.
  3. C) broke glucose down into alcohol by aerobic respiration.
  4. D) used photosynthesis to create alcohol and sugars.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

24) Anaerobic respiration

  1. A) occurs without oxygen and may produce methane gas.
  2. B) is a type of photosynthesis that does not require carbon dioxide.
  3. C) typically results in increased biomass.
  4. D) requires oxygen to break down glucose and other plant sugars.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

 

25) In some deserts, there are mice and lizards that are about the same size. The mice eat grains and the lizards feed on insects. Given this information, we would expect that the biomass of the

  1. A) lizards would be about the same as the mice.
  2. B) lizards would be greater than the mice.
  3. C) mice would be greater than the lizards.
  4. D) lizards and mice would be about 10 times greater than the organisms that they consume.

Answer:  C

Diff: 3

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

26) Why are there so few ecosystems with more than four levels of consumers?

  1. A) because biomass decreases by about 90% at each trophic level moving up
  2. B) because top consumers compete with and kill each other with increasing population size
  3. C) because consumers at these highest trophic levels typically form social groups that stop reproducing at high densities
  4. D) because predators at the highest trophic levels simply are not intelligent enough to hunt other top predators

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

27) The information of an energy pyramid reveals that

  1. A) it is expensive and inefficient to get most of your dietary calories from meats.
  2. B) it is expensive and inefficient to get most of your dietary calories from grains.
  3. C) consumers at lower trophic levels do not have as many calories as consumers at higher trophic levels.
  4. D) consumers at higher trophic levels are usually more abundant than consumers at lower trophic levels.

Answer:  A

Diff: 3

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

28) Which of the following animals in this figure would be expected to require the largest area per individual animal?

  1. A) rattlesnakes
  2. B) hawk
  3. C) rabbit
  4. D) coyote

Answer:  B

Diff: 3

LO:  1: Characteristics of ecosystems

 

29) Productivity of an ecosystem is best determined by the

  1. A) total amount of biomass in the system.
  2. B) number of individuals of each species.
  3. C) number of species present in the ecosystem.
  4. D) total photosynthesis each year.

Answer:  D

Diff: 2

LO:  2: The flow of energy through the food web

 

 

30) If the sun’s energy could be measured in units like money, which of the following organisms would be the most expensive to maintain?

  1. A) a mushroom
  2. B) a fox
  3. C) a squirrel
  4. D) a sunflower

Answer:  B

Diff: 2

LO:  2: The flow of energy through the food web

31) Environmental pollutants such as PCB’s contaminate oceans and other aquatic systems. Plankton in the ocean become contaminated by PCB’s and pass this along through the food chain. A pregnant woman has been cautioned to limit her consumption of food that may be high in PCBs. If she consumes food from a nearby contaminated ocean, we would expect that the most contaminated foods would be

  1. A) shrimp.
  2. B) clams.
  3. C) fish that eat shrimp.
  4. D) kelp and other ocean plants.

Answer:  C

Diff: 2

LO:  2: The flow of energy through the food web

 

32) A reverse biomass pyramid is typical of

  1. A) terrestrial ecosystems because of the high concentration of sunlight.
  2. B) terrestrial ecosystems because land can support more animals than water.
  3. C) aquatic ecosystems because top consumers live much longer than producers.
  4. D) aquatic ecosystems because water contains much more oxygen than air.

Answer:  C

Diff: 2

LO:  2: The flow of energy through the food web

 

33) Energy transfer between trophic levels in aquatic systems is generally

  1. A) less efficient than terrestrial food pyramids.
  2. B) less efficient than a detritus food web because aquatic systems lack fungi.
  3. C) inverted, in which more energy is transferred from one trophic level up to the next.
  4. D) more efficient than terrestrial food pyramids.

Answer:  D

Diff: 1

LO:  2: The flow of energy through the food web

 

 

34) Energy is lost as it moves from one trophic level to the next because

  1. A) one trophic level does not consume the entire trophic level below it.
  2. B) some of the calories consumed drive cellular activities and do not add mass.
  3. C) some ingested materials are undigested and eliminated.
  4. D) All of the above.

Answer:  D

Diff: 1

LO:  2: The flow of energy through the food web

 

35) In general, biomes at higher latitudes are most like

  1. A) biomes at higher altitudes.
  2. B) aquatic biomes.
  3. C) biomes at lower altitudes.
  4. D) biomes at lower latitudes.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  3: From ecosystems to global biomes

36) Biomes with more than 75 centimeters (30 inches) of rain a year and that never experience freezing temperatures are most likely found

  1. A) at high altitudes.
  2. B) nearest the equator at low altitudes.
  3. C) at high altitudes in temperate zones.
  4. D) at high altitudes and high latitudes.

Answer:  B

Diff: 2

LO:  3: From ecosystems to global biomes

 

37) Biomes with permafrost are most likely

  1. A) covered in coniferous forests at high latitudes.
  2. B) in temperate zones with deciduous trees.
  3. C) located near the poles and without any trees.
  4. D) located at high altitudes nearest the equator.

Answer:  C

Diff: 2

LO:  3: From ecosystems to global biomes

 

38) Biomes with less than 25 centimeters (10 inches) of rain a year are

  1. A) high in primary productivity.
  2. B) likely to have extremely cold winters.
  3. C) covered with coniferous trees.
  4. D) deserts.

Answer:  D

Diff: 1

LO:  3: From ecosystems to global biomes

 

 

39) Biomes with precipitation between 10-60 inches per year and seasonal temperature at lower elevations are commonly

  1. A) coniferous forests.
  2. B) hot deserts.
  3. C) grasslands.
  4. D) tropical rain forests.

Answer:  C

Diff: 2

LO:  3: From ecosystems to global biomes

 

40) Most warm desert biomes of the world are located

  1. A) about 20-30 degrees latitude north or south.
  2. B) in Asia.
  3. C) along a coastline.
  4. D) along the equator.

Answer:  A

Diff: 1

LO:  3: From ecosystems to global biomes

41) Which biome is characterized by frequent fires and rich soils?

  1. A) tropical rainforests
  2. B) tundra
  3. C) grasslands and prairies
  4. D) temperate forests

Answer:  C

Diff: 1

LO:  3: From ecosystems to global biomes

 

42) Which biome is characterized by the highest annual rainfalls and primary productivity?

  1. A) temperate deciduous forests
  2. B) temperate grasslands and prairies
  3. C) tropical rainforests
  4. D) tropical grasslands and prairies

Answer:  C

Diff: 1

LO:  3: From ecosystems to global biomes

 

43) Which biome is characterized by permafrost?

  1. A) tundra
  2. B) high latitude temperate forests
  3. C) cold deserts
  4. D) high latitude coniferous forests

Answer:  A

Diff: 1

LO:  3: From ecosystems to global biomes

 

 

44) You visit a region with two-way currents to see where many marine organisms inhabit shallow, nutrient rich waters. You are visiting

  1. A) an estuary.
  2. B) the open ocean.
  3. C) an inland wetland.
  4. D) a region where a stream flows into a lake.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  3: From ecosystems to global biomes

 

45) As you paddle along in your canoe, you pass alligators, herons, turtles, and tall marsh grasses on your journey through Everglades National Park. This magnificent ecosystem is one of the most famous examples of

  1. A) the saline portion of an estuary.
  2. B) a lake with some incoming tidal flow.
  3. C) a freshwater wetland.
  4. D) a freshwater stream.

Answer:  C

Diff: 2

LO:  3: From ecosystems to global biomes

46) Walking along a large city park on a hot summer day, you look for a cool resting place and sit down on a large rock under a willow tree, at the quiet edge of a stream. You have searched for and found an example of a

  1. A) microclimate.
  2. B) biome.
  3. C) landscape.
  4. D) population.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  3: From ecosystems to global biomes

 

47) Primary productivity of the open oceans is very limited because of

  1. A) the shortage of water.
  2. B) the shortage of light.
  3. C) the shortage of nutrients.
  4. D) low temperature.

Answer:  C

Diff: 1

LO:  3: From ecosystems to global biomes

 

 

48) Which of the following represent ecosystems with high average annual net primary productivity?

  1. A) algal beds, reefs, swamps, and marshes
  2. B) open ocean and continental shelves
  3. C) boreal forest and temperate grasslands
  4. D) estuaries, tundra, lakes, and streams

Answer:  A

Diff: 1

LO:  3: From ecosystems to global biomes

 

What once was an open pasture on a long abandoned farm has changed over time, without the direct influence of humans. After the cattle had been removed, shrubs and bushes could be seen dotting the grass-covered hillsides. A few years later, small pine trees and then larger deciduous trees appeared. Now, there are so many trees and shaded regions it is difficult to tell that this was once a field.

 

49) The changes in this field, from grasses to shrubs to trees, represent

  1. A) ecological succession.
  2. B) climax production.
  3. C) biological evolution.
  4. D) ecological adaptation.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

 

50) These ecological changes in the abandoned pasture represent

  1. A) aquatic to terrestrial succession.
  2. B) primary succession.
  3. C) intermediate succession.
  4. D) secondary succession.

Answer:  D

Diff: 2

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

51) In this wooded region that was once pasture, a mature forest of towering oaks and hickory trees has taken over. However, change is still apparent, as a large patch of young shrubs and small trees are growing where several large trees were toppled by a storm several years ago. Collectively, this wooded region represents

  1. A) a climax ecosystem.
  2. B) primary succession.
  3. C) a sustained biome.
  4. D) intermediate succession.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

 

 

Moss invades and establishes itself on bare rock, accumulating the beginnings of soil. After several years, enough soil has become established that grasses begin to grow where there was once bare rock. Without the moss building up soil, the grasses would have had no chance.

 

52) The mosses changed the environment enough to permit grasses to grow in a process called

  1. A) sublimation.
  2. B) facilitation.
  3. C) regeneration.
  4. D) improvisation.

Answer:  B

Diff: 2

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

 

53) The establishment of the mosses on bare rock and eventual addition of grasses represents

  1. A) a climax ecosystem.
  2. B) primary succession.
  3. C) secondary succession.
  4. D) intermediate succession.

Answer:  B

Diff: 2

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

 

54) The natural succession of a small farm pond will tend to

  1. A) increase the total amount of shoreline.
  2. B) increase the depth of the pond.
  3. C) increase the amount of water in the pond.
  4. D) increase sediment depth and make the pond more likely to freeze solid in the winter.

Answer:  D

Diff: 3

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

 

55) As successional changes occur in an ecosystem, new species take advantage of new conditions. Where do these new species come from?

  1. A) They evolve from other species in the immediate region.
  2. B) They come from surrounding ecosystems in other stages of succession.
  3. C) They are planted by forest rangers managing these forest ecosystems.
  4. D) The seeds of the new species are carried in by large streams and rivers.

Answer:  B

Diff: 1

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

 

56) Compared to an ecosystem with just a single stage of succession, an ecosystem with a variety of successional stages

  1. A) is more likely to experience forest fires.
  2. B) has greater biodiversity.
  3. C) is less likely to experience erosion.
  4. D) has a much lower rate of primary productivity.

Answer:  B

Diff: 1

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

 

57) If fire is suppressed in forests that naturally experience frequent fires,

  1. A) nutrient recycling improves.
  2. B) grasses are more abundant.
  3. C) pines and redwoods are more abundant.
  4. D) the frequency of crown fires increases when fire does occur.

Answer:  D

Diff: 2

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

 

58) The frequency of crown fires will decrease if

  1. A) forests are logged more frequently.
  2. B) smaller forest fires are allowed to burn naturally.
  3. C) deadwood is allowed to accumulate on the forest floors.
  4. D) the environment experiences less precipitation.

Answer:  B

Diff: 2

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

 

59) Crown fires

  1. A) create a mosaic of successional stages in an ecosystem.
  2. B) decrease biodiversity by eliminating species that are fire resistant.
  3. C) increase the later stages of succession.
  4. D) are not a natural factor in undisturbed ecosystems.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

 

60) About 10% of a large forest experienced a severe fire that burned all but the largest trees. Soon after the fire, the landowner consulted biologists to ask what should be done to the burned region. The biologists explained that if the landowner does nothing,

  1. A) rainfall will likely lead to a severe erosion problem.
  2. B) the same region will soon be expected to catch on fire again.
  3. C) the region will naturally recover and eventually become forest again.
  4. D) the opening will likely be repopulated with invasive species, not native to the region.

Answer:  C

Diff: 2

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

61) Which of the following represents a resilience mechanism?

  1. A) crown fires resulting from many years of fire suppression
  2. B) the emergence of a meadow in a recently burned forest
  3. C) soil erosion resulting from burned soil washing away from a forest floor
  4. D) burned trees accumulating on a forest floor after a fire

Answer:  B

Diff: 2

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

 

62) Which one of the following best represents a negative tipping point?

  1. A) logging trees and preventing their regrowth in a forest
  2. B) allowing natural wildfires to burn wherever they occur
  3. C) allowing resilience mechanisms to function after a wildfire
  4. D) relying upon bordering systems to repopulate a region that has been flooded

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

 

63) The National Ecosystem Observance Network (NEON) is a long-term study of ecosystems to help us understand the effects of

  1. A) nutrient cycling in eroded soils.
  2. B) climate change and invasive species.
  3. C) primary succession on volcanic islands.
  4. D) efficiency of energy transfer between producers and consumers.

Answer:  B

Diff: 3

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

 

64) The Long-Term Ecological Research sites (LTER) collectively focus on studying

  1. A) natural successional changes in ecosystems.
  2. B) the effects of various types of human disturbances to ecosystem function.
  3. C) how to make invasive species profitable for agriculture.
  4. D) creation of artificial soils for ecosystems lacking producers.

Answer:  B

Diff: 2

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

 

 

65) The type of forest fire in this photo

  1. A) makes crown fires more likely in the burned regions.
  2. B) significantly harms grasses and lodgepole pines in the burned regions.
  3. C) increases the frequency of scrub oaks and other broad-leaved species in the burned regions.
  4. D) promotes nutrient cycling in the burned regions.

Answer:  D

Diff: 2

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

 

 

 

66) This region of Iceland once was covered with forests. However, humans logged the trees and grazed sheep on the logged regions, preventing natural regeneration. This situation, in which one ecosystem has now been converted to another, represents

  1. A) a tipping point for this ecosystem.
  2. B) the power of natural resilience mechanisms.
  3. C) reverse ecological succession.
  4. D) a sustainable approach to ecosystem management.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  4: Ecosystem responses to disturbance

67) About 40% of the land’s primary production on Earth

  1. A) has been appropriated to meet human needs.
  2. B) has been destroyed by global climate change.
  3. C) uses more oxygen than it produces.
  4. D) has been lost just to build enough homes for all of the people on Earth.

Answer:  A

Diff: 1

LO:  5: Human values and ecosystem sustainability

 

68) One of the greatest human impacts on natural ecosystems results from

  1. A) the disruption of natural biogeochemical cycles.
  2. B) the generation of electricity from nuclear energy.
  3. C) the use of our oceans for shipping and transportation.
  4. D) the use of the sun and wind to generate electricity.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  5: Human values and ecosystem sustainability

 

69) Which one of the following contributes the most to global climate change?

  1. A) planting forests to grow wood for lumber and paper pulp
  2. B) the use of natural gas to heat homes
  3. C) the generation of electricity from nuclear fuel
  4. D) eating a vegetarian diet

Answer:  B

Diff: 3

LO:  5: Human values and ecosystem sustainability

 

70) Some developers in your town want to fill in an estuary to build a condominium with a wonderful view of a beach. They argue that building and selling apartments in the condominium will add jobs and income to the region. However, educated citizens ask about the cost of the development in lost ecosystem functions. They argue that in their local community, the jobs added in construction may be offset by expected losses in

  1. A) water quality and the local fishing industry.
  2. B) natural gas production in the region.
  3. C) lumber production for the regional timber industry.
  4. D) UVB protection.

Answer:  A

Diff: 3

LO:  5: Human values and ecosystem sustainability

 

 

71) Which of the following industries is most similar to a natural ecosystem service?

  1. A) pest control
  2. B) telecommunications
  3. C) urban public transportation systems
  4. D) the postal system

Answer:  A

Diff: 3

LO:  5: Human values and ecosystem sustainability

72) One of the reasons that humans continue to convert ecosystems to more direct human uses is that

  1. A) the benefits are experienced locally while the losses are experienced regionally or globally.
  2. B) the human uses are much more productive than the natural systems.
  3. C) ecosystems function best when they are managed by humans for human uses.
  4. D) humans can redirect natural systems to more sustainable systems.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  5: Human values and ecosystem sustainability

 

73) Many polluted ecosystems will recover if we stop polluting them. This illustrates

  1. A) loss of ecosystem capital.
  2. B) the essential role of keystone species in ecosystems.
  3. C) secondary succession.
  4. D) the natural resilience of ecosystems.

Answer:  D

Diff: 2

LO:  5: Human values and ecosystem sustainability

 

74) Restoration ecologists try to

  1. A) restore destroyed or damaged ecosystems to their native conditions.
  2. B) create new ecosystems with new ecosystem functions to gain ecosystem capital.
  3. C) create enclosures for zoos that imitate the abiotic components of natural environments.
  4. D) include ecosystems in national forests and parks where people can best interact with nature.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  5: Human values and ecosystem sustainability

 

75) For nearly 50 years, a farmer has raised corn and soybeans on his family’s 1,000-acre farm by a river. Now in retirement, the farmer wants to return the farmland to its natural state as a wetland in the floodplain of the river. The farmer will most need the services of

  1. A) a crop scientist.
  2. B) a restoration ecologist and data from LTER projects.
  3. C) an agricultural engineer with training in successional dynamics.
  4. D) a functional morphologist.

Answer:  B

Diff: 2

LO:  5: Human values and ecosystem sustainability

 

76) The growing human population

  1. A) is best addressed by the conversion of ecosystems to more direct human uses.
  2. B) requires the management of ecosystems to better serve the needs of humans.
  3. C) will increase the need for ecosystem services.
  4. D) will require an increase in forests and a decrease in agricultural land.

Answer:  C

Diff: 1

LO:  5: Human values and ecosystem sustainability

77) The most important outcome for ecosystem management is

  1. A) ecological sustainability.
  2. B) economic productivity.
  3. C) recreational use of managed regions.
  4. D) opportunities to harvest natural resources.

Answer:  A

Diff: 1

LO:  5: Human values and ecosystem sustainability

 

78) Our increasing human population requires that future management of natural systems be

  1. A) towards sustainability.
  2. B) focused on maximizing the harvest of natural resources.
  3. C) evaluated in terms of the gross national product.
  4. D) focused on agricultural productivity.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  5: Human values and ecosystem sustainability

 

79) As we consider the pressing demands of a growing human population, ecosystem services must be

  1. A) given proper economic value and not taken for granted.
  2. B) perceived as free.
  3. C) understood as unlimited resources.
  4. D) managed for maximum economic output.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  5: Human values and ecosystem sustainability

 

 

80) The best ecosystem management requires

  1. A) good stewardship and sustainability.
  2. B) planned disturbances and careful timing.
  3. C) restoration ecologists.
  4. D) government regulation and control.

Answer:  A

Diff: 1

LO:  5: Human values and ecosystem sustainability

 

Indigenous people living deep in the Brazilian rain forest have lived off the land for many centuries. Now iron ore mining companies are expanding into these regions. Government officials want to resolve the growing conflicts between the natives and the mining industry. They have been urged to bring together all of the interested parties.

 

81) Which of the following groups would represent the primary stakeholders in this dispute?

  1. A) representatives of the mining company
  2. B) the native people
  3. C) representatives of the Brazilian government
  4. D) all of the citizens of Brazil

Answer:  B

Diff: 2

LO:  5: Human values and ecosystem sustainability

82) The mining company operations in the forest will likely lead to the loss of ecosystem services, such as

  1. A) the depletion of iron ore from the ground.
  2. B) the shift from logging to mining.
  3. C) sources of freshwater.
  4. D) the construction of new roads.

Answer:  C

Diff: 2

LO:  5: Human values and ecosystem sustainability

 

 

83) In general, global primary productivity

  1. A) increases towards the equator.
  2. B) decreases towards the equator.
  3. C) increases towards the poles.
  4. D) is greatest in North America.

Answer:  A

Diff: 2

LO:  5: Human values and ecosystem sustainability

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