SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
DSST Environment And Humanity
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
dsst
,
science
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Growing more than one crop at a time.
Polyculture
Biodiversity
Commensalism
Homo Sapiens
2. The UN's first major conference on environmental issues.
Wilderness Act
Stockholm Conference
Turbidity
Monoculture
3. Areas with only enough rainfall for grasses to grow. As a result - most animals are grazers - such as buffalo.
Gross Primary Product
Wildlife Management
Transpiration
Grasslands
4. The southern-most continent - of which 98% is ice. This continent includes 70% of the world's fresh water - and 90% of the world's ice. Although the average temperature is -49
Antarctica
Taiga
K-Selected Populations
Non-government Organizations
5. An act which required the EPA to set standards for drinking water.
Transpiration
Mutualism
Alley Cropping
Safe Drinking Water Act
6. A type of symbiosis where one species benefit at the expense of the other.
Environmental Protection Agency
Autotrophs
Brackish Water
Parasitism
7. An extinct hominid species believed to be the last common ancestor between man and apes.
Sahelanthropus Tchadensis
Ecology
Environmental Protection Agency
Exosphere
8. The amount of variation among organisms living in a particular ecosystem. The loss of this key characteristic leads to a reduction in ecosystem efficiency and the ability of species to adapt to new situations.
Tropopause
Commensalism
Aldo Leopold
Biodiversity
9. The spraying of pesticides to prevent a pest problem before it happens.
Insurance Spraying
Resource Partitioning
Carbon Dioxide
Tundra
10. Water found in estuaries. This water is a mixture of saltine ocean water and fresh water - usually from a river or stream.
Consumers
Nitrous Oxide
Australopithecus Afarensis
Brackish Water
11. Organisms which create their own food out of inorganic (abiotic) substances.
Producers
Trophic Level
Vienna Convention for the Protection of the Ozone Layer
Cosmetic Spraying
12. The amount of pests needed before spraying pesticides is economical.
Parasitism
Economic Threshold
Sublimation
Intensive Subsistence Farming
13. The decomposition of organic nitrogen into inorganic ammonium. This process is also called mineralization.
Commensalism
Trophic Level
Ammonification
Producers
14. The biggest atmospheric layer. Without ozone - UV radiation causes ionization and the auroras in this layer.
Intensive Subsistence Farming
Nitrification
Thermosphere
Savannah
15. Organisms which consume autotrophs for food.
Kyoto Protocol
Coevolution
Hetrotrophs
Subsistence Farming
16. The position of an organism on the food chain.
Nitrous Oxide
Trophic Level
Tropopause
Precipitation
17. Consumers which eat decomposing organic material.
Detrivores
Advection
Antarctica
Homo Sapiens
18. Precipitation which does not reach the soil but is instead collected by plants.
Cosmetic Spraying
Interception
Omnivores
Total Fertility Rate
19. A community of similar living organisms largely affected by the area's climate.
Eukaryotes
Biomes
Coniferous Forest
Parasitism
20. The cloudiness of a liquid due to small suspended particles.
Turbidity
Coevolution
Grasslands
Eutrophication
21. Modern man.
Insurance Spraying
Homo Sapiens
Coniferous Forest
Biosphere
22. An extinct hominid species believed to have the same brain capacity as modern man and use many different weapons.
Neanderthals
Trophic Level
Water Pollution Control Act
Shifting Agriculture
23. A principle that states that two species competing for a single resource cannot coexist. One species will inevitably gain an advantage over the other - causing the looser either to migrate or to become extinct.
Mesosphere
R-Selected Populations
Competitive Exclusion
Surface Run-Off
24. A shubland found primarily in the South-Western United States and Mexico. Fire plays a predominant role in the life-cycle of the plants in this area - the seeds of which will sprout only after a fire.
Temperate Rain Forest
Commensalism
Deserts
Chaparral
25. The process by which certain kinds of bacteria convert atmospheric nitrogen gas into ammonia - a form accessible to living creatures.
Condensation
Deserts
Lithosphere
Nitrogen Fixation
26. An act which set standards for the amount of pollution in water.
Trophic Level
Social Ecology
Environmental Protection Agency
Water Pollution Control Act
27. An extinct hominid species believed to have long - ape-like arms; have a brain capacity half that of modern men; and use primitive tools.
Prokaryotes
Earth Summit
Homo Habilis
Infiltration
28. The process by which a new species is created. This process generally requires geographic isolation to prevent interbreeding between the newly emerging species and the parent species.
Keystone Species
Vienna Convention for the Protection of the Ozone Layer
Omnivores
Speciation
29. The combination of evaporation from the ocean - lakes - and other bodies of water and transpiration - the loss of water from plants.
UN Conference on Population and Development
Eukaryotes
Evapotranspiration
Autotrophs
30. A variety of species living together.
Monoculture
Carbon Dioxide
Community
Transpiration
31. An international organization designed to promote free trade between countries.
Infiltration
World Trade Organization
Stockholm Conference
Water Pollution Control Act
32. An act created to protect endangered and threatened species.
World Trade Organization
Oligotrophs
Ecosystem
Endangered Species Act
33. A partially enclosed part of the ocean with rivers or streams flowing into it.
Montreal Protocol
Hydrologic Cycle
Speciation
Estuary
34. Biomes with less than 10 inches of rain a year. Foliage is scarce in these areas - and remaining plants and animals work hard to conserve the little water they receive.
Lithosphere
Eutrophication
Carnivores
Deserts
35. Grasslands with short - widely spaced trees and no canopy - allowing for an unbroken layer of grasses beneath.
Savannah
Interception
Environmental Ethics
Exosphere
36. The process by which the sun's energy converts liquid water to water vapor in the atmosphere.
Brackish Water
Aldo Leopold
Evaporation
Biomes
37. Organisms with a nucleus.
Aldo Leopold
Precipitation
Polyculture
Eukaryotes
38. An international protocol designed to protect the ozone layer by phasing out the production of CFCs and other harmful chemicals.
Montreal Protocol
Coevolution
Mesosphere
Resource Partitioning
39. The middle atmospheric layer. Meteors burn up after entering this layer.
Mesosphere
Agroforestry
Ecotone
Nitrification
40. An act which established and enforced acceptable levels of air pollution.
Lithosphere
Clean Air Act
Air Pollution
Indicator Species
41. A layer of gasses surrounding the earth.
Tropical Rain Forest
Atmosphere
Browsers
Subsurface flow
42. Any living thing on earth.
Nitrous Oxide
Organism
Homo Erectus
Antarctica
43. Forests found in the northern regions of North America - Europe - and Asia characterized by freezing winters and warmer summers. These forests lie just below the tree line.
Organism
Taiga
Assimilation
Oligotrophs
44. An international protocol designed to stabilize global warming.
Kyoto Protocol
Cosmetic Spraying
Mutualism
Australopithecus Afarensis
45. An influential book by Rachel Carson which helped begin the environmental movement.
Brackish Water
Thermosphere
Kyoto Protocol
Silent Spring
46. The process of a substance passing directly from the solid phase to the gaseous phase - and vice versa.
Nitrogen Fixation
Sublimation
Tropopause
Carnivores
47. A forest characterized by clearly differentiated seasons - such as the trees loosing leaves in the fall and heavy snowfall in the winter.
Deciduous Forest
Atmosphere
Interception
Mesosphere
48. A community of species interacting with their nonliving (abiotic) environment.
Evaporation
Insurance Spraying
Ecosystem
Economic Threshold
49. An extinct hominid species believed to exhibit the first example of full-time bipedalism.
Australopithecus Afarensis
Polyculture
Omnivores
Kyoto Protocol
50. A situation where a layer of warmer air traps lower - cooler air - causing pollution to collect near the ground.
Competitive Exclusion
Biomes
Temperature Inversion
Gross Primary Product