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Test your basic knowledge |
DSST Environmental Science - 2
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. Help improve the standard of living for residents
Smokey the Bear's message
sustainable cities can
urbanization
open space
2. A living part of an organism's habitat
biotic factor
nodules
decomposer
biome
3. Habitat change and fragmentation
endangered species
biggest cause of biodiversity loss
sustainable cities can
insects
4. A group of land ecosystems with similar climates and organisms
urban area
If Earth did not have an atmosphere
biome
resource management
5. Energy from the sun would be reflected back into space
products derived from the natural environment
food web
uncentered commercial strip development
If Earth did not have an atmosphere
6. Refers to an increase in Earth's average surface temperature
biodiversity
species
global warming
renewable sources
7. An environment that provides the things an organism needs to live - grow - and reproduce
habitat
lead
epidemiology
give an example of a social hazard that cannot be easily controlled
8. Can result in a decrease of property damage
carnivore
extinction
fire suppression
wildlife corridor
9. The struggle between organisms to survive as they attempt to use the same limited resource
pollution
decomposer
competition
renewable resource
10. Moving into a population
ecosystem diversity
overfishing
emerging disease
immigration
11. Sex - weight - and health issues
teratogens
insects
omnivore
factors that cause different people to respond differently to environmental hazards
12. A virus or bacterium (organisms) that cause infectious diseases
biological hazards
pathogen
urbanization
infants
13. A form of decision-making concerned with the allocation and conservation of natural resources
primary succession
the ocean's absorption of carbon dioxide ...
resource management
producer
14. Shift of population from countryside to cities
uncentered commercial strip development
urbanization
risk assessment
economic value of forests
15. Manage - protect and reintroduce threatened and endangered species
consumer
name a human activity that contributes the most carbon dioxide to the atmosphere
Species Survival Plans (SSPs) goals
environmental science
16. Businesses are arranged in a long row along a roadway - with no main community
overfishing
fire suppression
uncentered commercial strip development
endangered
17. Pollution from a factory near your school
sustainable yield
habitat preservation
prescribed fires
give an example of a social hazard that cannot be easily controlled
18. A close relationship between two species that benefits at least one of the species
biggest cause of biodiversity loss
symbiosis
conservation
niche
19. A relationship in which one organism lives on or in a host and harms it
parasitism
nonrenewable resource
population
name a human activity that contributes the most carbon dioxide to the atmosphere
20. Organism that carries pathogens
conservation
vector
species
wildlife corridor
21. Amount of land each person uses
secondary succession
per capita land consumption
parasitism
ecosystem diversity
22. A resource that is either always available or is naturally replaced in a relatively short time
toxicant
renewable sources
renewable resource
endangered
23. The disappearance of a particular population from a given area - but not from the entire species globally
secondary succession
epidemiology
products derived from the natural environment
extirpation
24. The loss of a natural habitat
ecosystem diversity
mapping biodiversity hotspots
habitat destruction
risk
25. Using public transportation
an action that can reduce the greenhouse gas emissions caused by driving
species diversity
species
economic value of forests
26. Chemicals that cause cancer
prescribed fires
immigration
overfishing
carcinogens
27. Leaving a population
fishery
lead
sustainable cities can
emigration
28. The pattern of overlapping food chains in an ecosystem
adaptation
renewable sources
food web
producer
29. The series of changes that occur in an area where the ecosystem has been disturbed - but where soil and organisms still exist
biomagnification
secondary succession
nonrenewable resource
resource management
30. Causes a cooling effect
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31. The clearing of a forest and replacing it with another land use
habitat fragment
harvested sustainability is a renewable source IF
scavenger
deforestation
32. Rising sea level
genetic diversity
clear-cutting
biggest danger posed by global warming to people living in coastal areas
risk
33. Sikhote-Alin mountains and the Siberian tigers living there are separated from other mountains by this
fire suppression
Smokey the Bear's message
captive breeding programs
habitat fragment
34. An organism that is killed and eaten by another organism
ecotourism
biotic factor
habitat preservation
prey
35. The practice of protecting the environment
warming temperatures
carbon footprint
conservation
producer
36. The probability that a hazard will cause a harmful response
carbon footprint
risk
nodules
Smokey the Bear's message
37. A region that has many different types of organism is described as having a high level of this
species diversity
habitat destruction
nodules
Species Survival Plans (SSPs) goals
38. The organism that does the killing in a predation interaction
captive breeding
epidemiology
predator
food web
39. Relieving a nation from repaying some of the money it owes other nations in exchange for protecting its biodiversity
endangered
habitat destruction
endangered species
debt-for-nature swap
40. The largest population that an area can support
renewable sources
scavenger
carrying capacity
endangered
41. When fish are caught faster than they can breed - causing the populatio to decrease
Species Survival Plans (SSPs) goals
nonrenewable resource
emerging disease
overfishing
42. Building up not out
carrying capacity
captive breeding programs
A principal of smart growth
resource management
43. A nonliving part of an organism's habitat
abiotic factor
deforestation
decomposer
extinction
44. Deals with biological hazards
ecosystem diversity
resource
epidemiology
food web
45. A species in danger of becoming extinct in the near future
scavenger
endangered
commensalism
food chain
46. The amount of replacement is equal to the amount harvested
harvested sustainability is a renewable source IF
immigration
economic value of forests
omnivore
47. An area with a large population of valuable ocean organisms
habitat fragmentation
immigration
ecology
fishery
48. An organism that breaks down wastes and dead organisms
competition
planting of new trees help reduce climate change by
ecology
decomposer
49. The study of how living things interact with each other and their environment
consumer
ecology
biggest cause of biodiversity loss
biotic factor
50. Global phenomenon that has caused some organisms to move toward the poles and to higher altitude
warming temperatures
carbon footprint
competition
food web