Sustainable Farming the Ocean and Cimate Test Review

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How does monoculture affect crop biodiversity?

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How does monoculture affect crop biodiversity?

It leads to a reduction due to soil erosion and pollution from pesticides

too much of one plant species can rob the soil of its nutrients

Raising a single crop has drawbacks as it increases the risk of disease and pest outbreaks because monocultures lack other plant and animal species that limit the spread of disease and control pests through predation.

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How do GMO crops affect biodiversity?

It can be toxic to untargeted species

Existing species can be overrun by more dominant new species

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What are the advantages of organic farming?

Its safe, cleaner, generates a lower carbon footprint, reduces erosion, more sustainable long term

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What are the disadvantages of organic farming?

expensive, labor intensive, lower land use efficiency, crop yields are lower, no-till farming is often less successful b/c no herbicide use

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What is integrated pest management (IPM)?

Effective and environmentally sensitive approach to pest management that uses chemical and non-chemical practices and tries to reduce crop damage with the least amount of damage to the environment

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What are some advantages integrated pest management?

less genetic resistance of pests, reduces pest control/fertilizer/water costs

reduce risks to wildlife and human health.

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What are some disadvantages integrated pest management?

more involved planning, time and energy consuming, more outside knowledge

it requires expert knowledge about each pest situation. It takes more time than does use conventional pesticides.

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What is soil salinization?

The increasing salt concentration in plants as repeated irrigation happens and evaporations leaves salt deposits behind that are toxic to plants

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How does soil salinization affect crops?

Can dehydrate crops decreasing their yields

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How can soil salinization be prevented.

not over irrigating and using efficient irrigation

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How can we repair soil salinization?

by treating salty drainage water and setting up desalting plants

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Theory of Island Biogeography

The number of species on an island result from an equilibrium between immigration and extinction which are effected by the distance from the mainland, also islands that are more isolated receive less immigrants than those who are less isolated

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HIPPCO

habitat destruction, invasive species, population growth, pollution, climate change, overexploitation, these are the main factors that cause a loss in biodiversity

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Habitat Fragmentation

parts of a habitat are destroyed leaving behind smaller parts (ex: construction)

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Primary Productivity

rate at which biomass is produced by organisms that convert inorganic substrates into complex organic substances

rate at which organic matter is created by producers in an ecosystem

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Aquatic Biomes

productivity greatest in swamps and least in open ocean

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FRESH Aquatic biomes

Lake, stream ,river, freshwater wetland(super productive, reduces floods/droughts)

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SALT Aquatic Biomes

Mangrove swamp(salt tolerant), intertidal zone, coral reef, open ocean, salt march(along the coast and high productivity)

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What are freshwater lakes

Littoral Zone, Limnetic Zone, Profundal zone, benthic zone

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Littoral Zone f or sw

near shore, shallow, goes to a depth at which plants can root

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Limnetic Zone f or sw

a lot of sunlight, food is produced here for many consumers

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profundal zone f or sw

to dark for photosynthesis, colder water

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Benthic Zone

decomposers are found here

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saltwater oceans

intertidal, coastal, open, euphotic, aphotic

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intertidal zone

high low tides and organisms must be able to survive changing conditions

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coastal zone

nutrient rich and high biodiversity

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open ocean

most of the ocean with the large

  • where whales and large schooling fish live

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euphotic zone/ photic zone

photosynthesis occurs and lots of phytoplankton

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aphotic zone

gets colder + darker as depth increases

many benthic feeders along the bottom

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Why is the air less dense than the equator?

The equator receives direct solar energy compared to other latitudes, the air is warmed up at the equator and this air becomes less dense then rises (atmospheric convection)

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thermocline

Layer in the water in which the temperature changes very quickly

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upwelling

Deep, nutrient rich, cold water rises to the surface and replaces the warmer water

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Coriolis effect

due to rotation of the earth, currents divert to right in Northern hemisphere + left in southern hemisphere

( right in north) (left in south)

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what factors affect the patterns of ocean surface currents

Patterns of surface currents are determined by wind direction, Coriolis forces from the Earth's rotation, and the position of landforms that interact with the currents

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ENSO

El Nino southern oscillation

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El Nino

weak upwelling and deep thermocline, east pacific water warms and trade winds weaken, occurs in the tropical east pacific

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La nina

strong upwelling and shallow thermocline, increased phytoplankton concentrations in the east

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what does el Niño create

causes warmer temperatures, which eventually fall, and when they have fallen substantially enough, La Nina occurs.

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Solar Insolation

The amount of solar radiation reaching an area that’s measured in watss/m^2

  • Depends on the angle of the earth and how directly rays strike the earths surface

  • Also the amount of atmosphere the suns rays pass through

  • Equator has higher insolation and the poles have lower

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