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Test your basic knowledge |
Farming
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
agriculture
Instructions:
Answer 35 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. Kill insects
Insecticides
Herbicides
Reduced tillage systems
Salinization
2. Removal of layers of soil - creating channels or ravines too large to be removed by normal tillage operations
Biocides
Reduced tillage systems
Gully erosion
Insecticides
3. An ecologically based pest-control strategy that relies on natural mortality factors - such as natural enemies - weather - cultural control methods - and carefully applied doses of pesticides
Reduced tillage systems
Chronic effects
Integrated pest management
Terracing
4. Planting different kinds of crops alternating strips along land contours; when one crop is harvested - the other crop remains to protect the soil and prevent water from running straight down a hill
Micorrhizal symbiosis
Mulch
Desertification
Strip farming
5. A rebound of pest populations due to acquired resistance to chemicals and nonspecific destruction to natural and competitors by broad scale pesticides
Organophosphates
Contour plowing
Pest resurgence
Chronic effects
6. 'botanicals' or organic compounds naturally occurring in plants - animals or microbes that serve as pesticides
Natural organic pesticides
Fumigants
Economic thresholds
Terracing
7. In pest management - the point at which the cost of pest damage exceeds the costs of pest control
Chlorinated hydrocarbons
Community supported agriculture
Inorganic pesticides
Economic thresholds
8. Shaping the land to cerate level shelves of earth to hold water and soil; requires extensive hand labor or expensive machinery - but it enables farmers to farm very steep hillsides
Rill erosion
Desertification
Terracing
Mulch
9. An association between the roots of most plant species and certain fungi. The plant provides organic compounds to the fungus - while the fungus provides water and nutrients to the plant
Mulch
Micorrhizal symbiosis
Chlorinated hydrocarbons
Chronic effects
10. Plants that can be planted immediately after harvest to hold and protect the soil
Cover crops
Locavore
Herbicides
Insecticides
11. Conversion of productive lands to desert
Rill erosion
Community supported agriculture
Desertification
Chronic effects
12. Water saturation of soil that fills all air spaces and causes plant roots to die from lack of oxygen; a result of over irrigation
Locavore
Desertification
Acute effects
Water logging
13. Toxic gases such as methyl bromine that are used to kill pests
Acute effects
Pesticide
Fumigants
Organophosphates
14. The first true layer of soil; layer in which organic material is mixed with mineral particles; thickness ranges from a meter of more under virgin prairie to zero in some desserts
Gully erosion
Surface soil
Cover crops
Contour plowing
15. A broad-spectrum poison that kills a wide range of organisms
Natural organic pesticides
Water logging
Integrated pest management
Biocides
16. Include cancer - birth defects - immunological problems - endometriosis - neurological problems - Parkinson's disease - and other chronic degenerative diseases
Chronic effects
Gully erosion
Subsoil
Terracing
17. Chemicals that kill plants
Community supported agriculture
Natural organic pesticides
Inorganic pesticides
Herbicides
18. A program in which you make an annual contribution to a local farm in return for weekly deliveries of a 'share' of whatever the farm produces
Locavore
Community supported agriculture
Desertification
Contour plowing
19. Chemical compounds that persist in the environment and retain biological activity for long times
Persistent organic pollutants
Insecticides
Chronic effects
Mulch
20. Someone who eats locally grown - seasonal food
Locavore
Rill erosion
Chlorinated hydrocarbons
Sheet erosion
21. Any chemical that kills - controls - drives away - or modifies the behavior of a pest
Salinization
Fungicides
Locavore
Pesticide
22. Inorganic chemicals such as metals - acids - or bases used as pesticides
Herbicides
Inorganic pesticides
Microbial agents and biological controls
Rill erosion
23. Systems - such as minimum till - conserve-till - and no-till - that preserve soil - save energy and water - and increase crop yields
Fungicides
Chlorinated hydrocarbons
Pest resurgence
Reduced tillage systems
24. The removal of thin layers of soil as little rivulets of running water gather and cut small channels in the soil
Pesticide
Rill erosion
Microbial agents and biological controls
Chlorinated hydrocarbons
25. A process in which mineral salts accumulate in the soil - killing plants; occurs when soil in dry climates are irrigated profusely
Community supported agriculture
Microbial agents and biological controls
Salinization
Mulch
26. Peeling off thin layers of soil from the land surface; accomplished primarily by wind and water
Cover crops
Economic thresholds
Sheet erosion
Salinization
27. Beneficial microbes (bacteria or fungi) that can be used to suppress or control pests
Acute effects
Cover crops
Inorganic pesticides
Microbial agents and biological controls
28. Plowing along hill contours reduces erosion
Contour plowing
Inorganic pesticides
Insecticides
Surface soil
29. Plants that grow for more than two years
Fungicides
Mulch
Perennial species
Acute effects
30. Kill fungi
Pesticide
Fungicides
Mulch
Natural organic pesticides
31. Protective ground cover - including both natural products and synthetic materials that protects the soil - save water - and prevent weed growth
Micorrhizal symbiosis
Subsoil
Integrated pest management
Mulch
32. Organic molecules to which phosphate group(s) are attached
Locavore
Acute effects
Organophosphates
Insecticides
33. A layer of soil beneath the topsoil that has a lower organic content and higher concentrations of fine mineral particles; often contains soluble compounds and clay particles carried down by percolating water
Fungicides
Biocides
Subsoil
Community supported agriculture
34. Including poisoning and illnesses caused by relatively high doses and accidental exposures
Fumigants
Mulch
Acute effects
Sheet erosion
35. Hydrocarbon molecules to which chlorine atoms are attached
Chlorinated hydrocarbons
Persistent organic pollutants
Inorganic pesticides
Micorrhizal symbiosis