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Environmental Science Study Guide Fall Final Completion Complete each sentence or statement. 1. A scientist who studies a community of organisms and their nonliving environment is a(n) ____________________. 2. Scientists don’t guess answers to questions they have about the natural world; they use ____________________. 3. If the temperature in London reaches the freezing mark, the temperature is probably measured as 0° ____________________. 4. If you multiply length by width, you can find the ____________________ of a square or rectangle. 5. If you divide the mass of a substance by its volume, you can find its ____________________. 6. The study of fossils, the study of earthquakes, and the study of volcanoes all fall under the branch of Earth science called ____________________. 7. A scientist may form a(n) ____________________ to answer a question even before observations or experiments are made. 8. A person has a fever if his or her body temperature rises above 98.6° ____________________. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. meters physical geographer mass area geologist mathematical model hypothesis liters conceptual model 9. You can use ____________________ to measure the distance between two buildings. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. seismologist geochemistry ecologist geology 10. A person who studies earthquakes is a(n) ____________________. 11. A person who studies organisms and their environment is a(n) ____________________. 12. The fuels that we use to run cars, ships, and factories and to generate electricity are called ____________________. 13. All living things are made up of the element ____________________. 14. Most of the carbon in fossil fuels exists as ____________________. 15. Black gold and crude oil are two common names for ____________________. 16. Methane, butane, and propane are three components that can be separated from ____________________. 17. When coal is burned, sulfur dioxide is released, which then can form ____________________. 18. Burning petroleum products causes an environmental problem called ____________________. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. biomass coal recycling geothermal energy chemical energy nuclear energy natural gas renewable petroleum 19. Resources such as trees, water, and most animals are ____________________. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. coal smog petroleum natural gas 20. Burning petroleum is the main cause of air pollution called ____________________. 21. The average weather condition in an area over an extended period of time is known as ____________________. 22. The rock formation that is the source of mineral fragments in the soil is called the ___________________. 23. The ability of soil to hold and supply nutrients is called ____________________. 24. Bacteria and fungi decompose plants and animals to create ____________________. 25. The series of layers in which soil forms are called ____________________. 26. The pH of a soil influences how ____________________dissolve in the soil. 27. Maintaining the fertility of soil by protecting it from erosion and nutrient loss is known as ____________________. 28. Plants and trees protect the soil from ____________________ by acting as anchors to the soil. 29. To help prevent erosion, farmers will often plow across the slope of a hill. This technique is called ____________________. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. abrasion soil conservation humus acid precipitation chemical weathering climate 30. Rain, sleet, or snow with a high concentration of acids is called ____________________. 31. The same kind of weather in a place over a long time is its ____________________. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. leaching bedrock erosion topsoil chemical humus differential weathering mechanical weathering abrasion 32. Gardeners want a layer of rich _____________________ for their vegetable gardens. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. nonpoint-source load DO level gradient channel alluvial fan water table point-source delta 33. Runoff that contains fertilizer and pesticides and flows from neighborhood yards into street gutters is ____________________ pollution. 34. The boundary between the zone of aeration and the zone of saturation is called the ____________________. 35. Where the Nile River flows into the Mediterranean, a fertile ____________________ has formed. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. cap rock discharge sediment 36. A layer of ____________________ is left behind whenever it floods. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. westerlies trade winds Coriolis effect polar easterlies secondary greenhouse effect thermal conduction primary 37. When you pick up a hot cup, heat is transferred from the cup to your hand by ____________________. 38. Ozone and smog are examples of ____________________ pollutants. 39. Winds that flow toward the poles in the opposite direction of the trade winds are called ____________________. 40. The ____________________ is caused by gases in the atmosphere that absorb radiation and transfer heat. 41. Winds in the Northern Hemisphere traveling north curve to the east, and winds traveling south curve to the west due to the ____________________. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. radiation global warming thermal conduction convection current 42. Energy that moves as electromagnetic waves is called ____________________. 43. When the global temperature rises bit by bit it is called ____________________. 44. Warm air rising and cool air sinking is called a(n) ____________________. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. stratosphere troposphere mesosphere thermosphere 45. If the layers of the atmosphere were a cake, the icing would be the ____________________. 46. The coldest layer of the atmosphere is the ____________________. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. latitude tropical temperate elevation deciduous trees surface currents evergreens climate prevailing winds weather 47. The day-to-day change in temperature and precipitation makes up an area’s ____________________. 48. An area’s distance north or south of the equator is the area’s ____________________. 49. Large grazing animals, including bison, live in the ____________________ grasslands of North America. 50. At the end of the growing season ____________________ lose their leaves. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. solar maximum Milankovitch theory asteroid Pangaea 51. Dinosaurs might have been killed by a climate change. The change may have been caused by the crash of a(n) ____________________. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. greenhouse effect global warming 52. A gradual increase in the average global temperature is called ____________________. 53. The Earth’s natural heating process, in which gases in the atmosphere trap thermal energy, is called the ____________________. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. tundra alpine tropical rain forest 54. If you were in a very warm biome that received 210 cm of precipitation this year, you would be in the ____________________ biome. 55. It is July. You are in a place that has 24 hours of daylight. You are in the ____________________ biome. 56. Mt. Kilimanjaro, in the tropics, is one of the world’s highest mountains. Its climate belongs to the ____________________ biome. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. dry weather snow 57. Deciduous trees are not the most common trees in the taiga because they are easily damaged by ____________________. 58. Waxy leaves help shrubs adapt to the ____________________ of chaparral regions. 59. Water used by people when they dig a well is ____________________. 60. A heavy rain falls on very wet soil. The flood caused by this event is due to ____________________. 61. After planting a vegetable garden on a city block for several years, the block’s residents stop planting and caring for the garden. The area is soon covered with weeds. This is an example of ____________________. 62. The climate of a rocky mountaintop warms up over a few years. The icecap that covered the mountain is soon replaced by grass and wildflowers. This is an example of ____________________. 63. The process of transpiration is part of the ____________________. 64. The process of respiration is part of the ____________________. 65. The process of decomposition is part of the ____________________. 66. Increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere may cause ____________________. 67. Lightning in the atmosphere may cause ____________________. 68. Steam comes from a teakettle filled with boiling water. This is an example of ____________________. 69. Moisture forms on the outside of a glass on a hot day. This is an example of ____________________. 70. In composting, gardeners allow a pile of plant material such as dead leaves to decay. Composting is a form of ____________________. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. combustion evaporation succession decomposition photosynthesis condensation respiration precipitation 71. Earth’s supply of fresh water is renewed by ____________________. 72. Lichens are important early contributors to ____________________. 73. Carbon is returned to the environment when sugar molecules are broken down during the process of ____________________. 74. The carbon in coal, oil, and natural gas is returned to the atmosphere during ____________________. 75. Water helps regulate body temperature through perspiration and ____________________. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. runoff biodiversity pioneer species succession groundwater 76. Precipitation that is stored in the ground is ____________________. 77. The growing of a community over time is ____________________. 78. The variety of species present in an area is called ____________________. 79. Precipitation that runs from land to rivers and lakes is ____________________. 80. The first living things to grow in an area are ____________________. 81. Losing one species could harm an entire ____________________. 82. Minerals and fossil fuels are examples of ____________________. 83. An unwanted change in the environment that is caused by harmful substances is called ____________________. 84. Natural resources that can be replaced at the same rate at which they are consumed are ____________________. 85. People practice ____________________ when they work to preserve natural resources. 86. Anything that causes pollution is a ____________________. 87. A resource that cannot last forever is a ____________________. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. renewable resource nonrenewable resource pollutant 88. A resource that can be used over and over is a ____________________. 89. The number and variety of organisms living in an area is called ____________________. 90. The presence of more individuals in an area than the area can support is called ____________________. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. biodiversity conservation overpopulation 91. The wise use and preservation of natural resources is called ____________________. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. estuary biome plankton littoral zone open-water zone deep-water zone wetland savanna 92. Tiny organisms that float near the surface of the water and produce their own food are ____________________. 93. An ecosystem that plays an important role in flood control is a(n) ____________________. 94. A nutrient-rich area where fresh water from rivers mixes with salt water from the ocean is a(n) ____________________. 95. A large area characterized by its climate and the plants and animals that live there is a(n) ____________________. 96. The area of water closest to the edge of a lake or pond is the ____________________. 97. The area of a lake or pond where no sunlight reaches is the ____________________. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. swamp forest wetland marsh 98. An important ecosystem for flood control is a _____________________. 99. A wetland with no trees is a(n) ____________________. 100. An ecosystem that has trees and is partly under water is a ____________________. 101. A lake filled with sediment may become a wetland and then a ____________________. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. temperate deciduous forest desert tundra 102. A dromedary is an animal that can travel for many days without drinking water. You would expect to find the dromedary in a ____________________ biome. 103. The hare curls up to stay warm. It has a short tail and ears that hold in body heat. The hare would most likely live in a ____________________ biome. 104. The white-tailed deer has a spotted coat that helps it blend in with trees. This deer would most likely be found in a ____________________ biome. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. deciduous conifer 105. A redwood is a tree that has cones and leaves shaped like needles. Therefore, a redwood is a ____________________. 106. The sugar maple tree has leaves that turn yellow, orange, and red in fall. Therefore, a sugar maple is a ____________________ tree. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. swamp marsh estuary 107. You are in an area with fast-moving water that spills into the ocean. You are in a(n) ____________________. 108. You are in an area with standing water and willows. You are in a(n) ____________________. 109. You are in an area near the shore of a pond with many grasses and no trees. You are in a(n) ____________________. Use the terms from the following list to complete the sentences below. coniferous forest tropical rain forest savanna 110. You are in Africa. It is summer and dried grass covers the ground. You are likely in a ____________________. 111. It is winter. You are in a place with tall trees full of leaves. It is 0°C. You are likely in a ____________________. 112. You are in a place with many trees that receives 300 cm of rainfall per year. You are likely in a ____________________. 113. An ecosystem consists of the living and ____________________ environment. 114. The physical area in which an organism lives is its ____________________. 115. Ernst Haeckel coined the term ____________________ to describe the study of how organisms interact with one another and with their environment. 116. The living organisms in a habitat are called ____________________ factors. 117. The number of species living within an ecosystem is a measure of its ____________________. 118. The sequential replacement of populations in an area that has not previously supported life is called ____________________ succession. 119. The small, fast-growing plants that are the first organisms to live in a habitat are called ____________________ ____________________. 120. A receding glacier is a good example of ____________________ ____________________. 121. Everything that organisms do in ecosystems, such as running, breathing, burrowing, and growing, requires ____________________. 122. Animals known as ____________________ eat only primary producers. 123. An organism that eats a primary consumer is called a(n) ____________________ consumer. 124. The term ____________________ is given to the bacteria that break down dead tissue. 125. The primary productivity of an ecosystem is a measure of the amount of organic material that the ____________________ organisms in the ecosystem produce. 126. In an ecosystem, ____________________ diminishes at each successive trophic level. 127. A path of energy through the trophic levels of an ecosystem is called a(n) ____________________ ____________________. 128. The interrelated food chains in an ecosystem are called a(n) ____________________ ____________________. 129. Decomposers are part of a special class of consumers called ____________________. 130. An energy pyramid shows the amount of energy contained in the bodies of organisms at each ____________________ level. 131. Every time that energy is transferred in an ecosystem, potential energy is lost as ____________________. 132. When forests are cut down, both water and nutrient ____________________ are altered. 133. Water that seeps into the soil is called ____________________ water. 134. Carbon is returned to the atmosphere by cellular respiration, combustion, and ____________________. 135. The conversion of nitrogen gas to ammonia by the action of bacteria is called ____________________ ____________________. 136. The formation of sulfuric acid in the atmosphere causes ____________________ ____________________. 137. Pollutants called ____________________ are converted into free chlorine that eventually destroys the protective ozone layer. 138. The heat-trapping ability of carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide in the atmosphere is known as the ____________________ ____________________. 139. As molecules of pollutants pass up through the trophic levels of the food chain, they become increasingly concentrated in a process called ____________________ ____________________. 140. Water trapped beneath the soil, largely in porous rock, is known as ____________________ ____________________. 141. The reason that ____________________ resources must be conserved is that they cannot replenish themselves naturally. 142. A great deal of water is found beneath the soil within porous rock reservoirs called ____________________. 143. The ____________________ countries on Earth are experiencing the greatest increase in population growth. 144. The back-and-forth evolutionary adjustments between interacting members of an ecosystem are called ____________________. 145. In a parasitic relationship, the organism that provides benefits to another organism at its own expense is called the ____________________. 146. The general term for the biotic relationship in which one organism feeds upon another is ____________________. 147. A symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits and another is often harmed but not killed is called ____________________. 148. When two or more species evolve in response to each other, it is called ____________________. 149. The symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits and the other neither benefits nor suffers harm is called ____________________. 150. The term ____________________ is used to describe a close relationship between two dissimilar organisms in which one organism usually benefits. 151. A fish called a cleaner wrasse eats the tiny parasites that cling to and feed upon much larger fish. Therefore, the cleaner wrasse has a(n) ____________________ relationship with the larger fish. 152. A(n) ____________________ describes the habitat, feeding habits, other aspects of an organism’s biology, and its interactions with other organisms and the environment. 153. The struggle among organisms for the same limited natural resources is called ____________________. 154. The total niche that an organism is potentially able to use within an ecosystem is called that organism’s ____________________ ____________________. 155. The prevailing weather conditions in any given area is called the area’s ____________________. 156. A major biological community that occurs over a large area of land is called a(n) ____________________. 157. The thick, continually frozen layer of ground found in the northern tundra is called ____________________. 158. The biome that makes up most of the central part of the continental United States is ____________________ ____________________. 159. A(n) ____________________ is open, windswept ground that is always frozen. 160. Coniferous trees are predominantly found in the ____________________ biome. 161. Trees that lose their leaves every year are known as ____________________. 162. Elk and moose may live in the ____________________, areas that are also the primary source of the world’s lumber. 163. A biome that is characterized by lush vegetation, abundant rain, and year-round warm temperatures is a(n) ____________________ ____________________ ____________________. 164. A dry grassland known as a(n) ____________________ is the home of elephants, giraffes, and lions, having open, widely spaced trees and seasonal rainfall. Environmental Science Study Guide Fall Final Answer Section COMPLETION 1. ANS: ecologist DIF: 1 REF: 1 2. ANS: scientific methods OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 3. ANS: Celsius REF: 2 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 4. ANS: area REF: 4 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 5. ANS: density REF: 4 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 6. ANS: geology REF: 4 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 7. ANS: hypothesis REF: 1 OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 8. ANS: Fahrenheit REF: 2 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 9. ANS: meters REF: 4 OBJ: 3 DIF: 1 10. ANS: seismologist REF: 4 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 11. ANS: ecologist REF: 1 OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 REF: 1 12. ANS: energy resources OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 13. ANS: carbon REF: 2 OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 REF: 2 14. ANS: hydrocarbons OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 15. ANS: petroleum OBJ: 2 REF: 2 DIF: 1 16. ANS: natural gas REF: 2 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 REF: 2 17. ANS: acid precipitation OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 18. ANS: smog REF: 2 OBJ: 5 DIF: 1 19. ANS: renewable REF: 2 OBJ: 5 DIF: 1 20. ANS: smog REF: 1 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 21. ANS: climate REF: 2 OBJ: 5 DIF: 1 22. ANS: parent rock REF: 2 OBJ: 3 DIF: 1 23. ANS: fertility REF: 3 OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 24. ANS: humus REF: 3 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 25. ANS: horizons REF: 3 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 26. ANS: nutrients REF: 3 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 REF: 3 27. ANS: soil conservation OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 28. ANS: erosion REF: 3 OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 REF: 4 29. ANS: contour plowing OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 REF: 4 30. ANS: acid precipitation OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 31. ANS: climate OBJ: 2 REF: 1 DIF: 1 32. ANS: topsoil REF: 2 OBJ: 3 DIF: 1 REF: 3 33. ANS: nonpoint-source OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 34. ANS: water table REF: 4 OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 35. ANS: delta REF: 3 OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 36. ANS: sediment REF: 2 OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 REF: 2 37. ANS: thermal conduction OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 38. ANS: secondary REF: 2 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 39. ANS: westerlies REF: 2 OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 REF: 3 40. ANS: greenhouse effect OBJ: 2 DIF: 2 REF: 2 41. ANS: Coriolis effect OBJ: 3 DIF: 2 42. ANS: radiation REF: 3 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 REF: 2 43. ANS: global warming OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 REF: 2 44. ANS: convection current OBJ: 3 DIF: 1 REF: 2 45. ANS: thermosphere OBJ: 2 DIF: 2 46. ANS: mesosphere REF: 1 OBJ: 4 DIF: 2 47. ANS: weather REF: 1 OBJ: 4 DIF: 1 REF: 1 OBJ: 1 48. ANS: latitude DIF: 1 49. ANS: temperate REF: 1 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 REF: 3 50. ANS: deciduous trees OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 51. ANS: asteroid REF: 3 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 REF: 4 52. ANS: global warming OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 REF: 4 53. ANS: greenhouse effect OBJ: 3 DIF: 1 REF: 4 54. ANS: tropical rain forest OBJ: 3 DIF: 1 55. ANS: tundra REF: 2 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 56. ANS: alpine REF: 3 OBJ: 2 DIF: 2 57. ANS: snow REF: 3 OBJ: 3 DIF: 1 58. ANS: dry weather REF: 3 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 REF: 3 59. ANS: groundwater OBJ: 2 DIF: 2 60. ANS: runoff REF: 1 OBJ: 1 DIF: 2 REF: 1 61. ANS: secondary succession OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 REF: 2 62. ANS: primary succession OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 63. ANS: water cycle REF: 2 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 REF: 1 64. ANS: carbon cycle OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 REF: 1 65. ANS: nitrogen cycle OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 REF: 1 66. ANS: global warming OBJ: 3 DIF: 1 REF: 1 67. ANS: nitrogen fixation OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 68. ANS: evaporation REF: 1 OBJ: 3 DIF: 1 REF: 1 69. ANS: condensation OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 REF: 1 70. ANS: decomposition OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 REF: 1 71. ANS: precipitation OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 72. ANS: succession REF: 1 OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 73. ANS: respiration REF: 2 OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 74. ANS: combustion REF: 1 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 75. ANS: evaporation REF: 1 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 REF: 1 76. ANS: groundwater OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 77. ANS: succession REF: 1 OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 78. ANS: biodiversity REF: 2 OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 79. ANS: runoff REF: 2 OBJ: 3 DIF: 1 REF: 1 80. ANS: pioneer species OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 81. ANS: ecosystem REF: 2 OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 REF: 2 82. ANS: nonrenewable resources OBJ: 3 DIF: 1 83. ANS: pollution REF: 1 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 REF: 1 84. ANS: renewable resources OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 REF: 1 85. ANS: conservation OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 86. ANS: pollutant REF: 2 OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 REF: 1 87. ANS: nonrenewable resource OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 REF: 1 88. ANS: renewable resource OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 89. ANS: biodiversity REF: 1 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 REF: 2 90. ANS: overpopulation OBJ: 3 DIF: 1 REF: 1 91. ANS: conservation OBJ: 4 DIF: 1 92. ANS: plankton REF: 1 OBJ: 1 DIF: 1 93. ANS: wetland REF: 2 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 94. ANS: estuary REF: 2 OBJ: 3 DIF: 1 95. ANS: biome REF: 2 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 96. ANS: littoral zone REF: 2 OBJ: 1 REF: 3 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 97. ANS: deep-water zone DIF: 1 98. ANS: wetland REF: 3 OBJ: 2 DIF: 1 99. ANS: marsh REF: 3 OBJ: 3 DIF: 1 100. ANS: swamp REF: 3 OBJ: 3 DIF: 1 101. ANS: forest REF: 3 OBJ: 3 DIF: 1 102. ANS: desert REF: 3 OBJ: 4 DIF: 2 103. ANS: tundra REF: 1 OBJ: 2 DIF: 2 REF: 1 104. ANS: temperate deciduous forest OBJ: 2 DIF: 2 105. ANS: conifer REF: 1 OBJ: 2 DIF: 2 106. ANS: deciduous REF: 1 OBJ: 2 DIF: 2 107. ANS: estuary REF: 1 OBJ: 2 DIF: 2 108. ANS: swamp REF: 2 OBJ: 3 DIF: 2 109. ANS: marsh REF: 3 OBJ: 3 DIF: 2 110. ANS: savanna REF: 3 OBJ: 3 DIF: 2 REF: 1 111. ANS: coniferous forest OBJ: 2 DIF: 2 REF: 1 112. ANS: tropical rain forest OBJ: 2 DIF: 2 113. ANS: nonliving OBJ: 2 REF: 1 DIF: I 114. ANS: habitat OBJ: 16.1.1 DIF: I 115. ANS: ecology OBJ: 16.1.1 DIF: I 116. ANS: biotic OBJ: 16.1.1 DIF: I 117. ANS: biodiversity OBJ: 16.1.1 DIF: I 118. ANS: primary OBJ: 16.1.2 DIF: I OBJ: 16.1.3 119. ANS: pioneer species DIF: I OBJ: 16.1.3 120. ANS: primary succession DIF: I 121. ANS: energy OBJ: 16.1.3 DIF: I 122. ANS: herbivores OBJ: 16.2.1 DIF: I 123. ANS: secondary OBJ: 16.2.1 DIF: I OBJ: 16.2.1 124. ANS: decomposers DIF: I OBJ: 16.2.1 125. ANS: photosynthetic DIF: II 126. ANS: energy OBJ: 16.2.1 DIF: I 127. ANS: food chain OBJ: 16.2.1 DIF: I 128. ANS: food web OBJ: 16.2.2 DIF: I 129. ANS: detritivores OBJ: 16.2.2 DIF: II 130. ANS: trophic OBJ: 16.2.2 DIF: I 131. ANS: heat OBJ: 16.2.2 DIF: I 132. ANS: cycles OBJ: 16.2.3 DIF: I 133. ANS: ground OBJ: 16.3.1 DIF: I 134. ANS: erosion OBJ: 16.3.1 DIF: I OBJ: 16.3.2 135. ANS: nitrogen fixation DIF: II 136. ANS: acid rain acid precipitation OBJ: 16.3.3 DIF: II OBJ: 18.1.1 137. ANS: CFCs chlorofluorocarbons DIF: II OBJ: 18.1.2 138. ANS: greenhouse effect DIF: II OBJ: 18.1.3 139. ANS: biological magnification DIF: II OBJ: 18.2.1 140. ANS: ground water DIF: II OBJ: 18.2.2 141. ANS: nonrenewable DIF: I 142. ANS: aquifers OBJ: 18.2.2 DIF: II 143. ANS: developing OBJ: 18.2.2 DIF: II 144. ANS: coevolution OBJ: 18.2.4 DIF: II 145. ANS: host OBJ: 17.1.1 DIF: I 146. ANS: predation OBJ: 17.1.2 DIF: I 147. ANS: parasitism OBJ: 17.1.2 DIF: I 148. ANS: coevolution OBJ: 17.1.2 DIF: II OBJ: 17.1.2 149. ANS: commensalism DIF: I 150. ANS: symbiosis OBJ: 17.1.3 DIF: I 151. ANS: mutualistic OBJ: 17.1.3 DIF: II 152. ANS: niche OBJ: 17.1.3 DIF: I 153. ANS: competition OBJ: 17.2.1 DIF: I OBJ: 17.2.1 154. ANS: fundamental niche DIF: I 155. ANS: climate OBJ: 17.2.2 DIF: I 156. ANS: biome OBJ: 17.3.1 DIF: I 157. ANS: permafrost OBJ: 17.3.2 DIF: I OBJ: 17.3.3 158. ANS: temperate grasslands DIF: I 159. ANS: tundra OBJ: 17.3.3 DIF: I 160. ANS: taiga OBJ: 17.3.3 DIF: I OBJ: 17.3.4 161. ANS: deciduous DIF: I 162. ANS: taiga OBJ: 17.3.4 DIF: I OBJ: 17.3.4 163. ANS: tropical rain forest DIF: I 164. ANS: savanna OBJ: 17.3.4 DIF: I OBJ: 17.3.4