All AP Environmental Science Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #3 : Biochemical Cycles
Why can't plants utilize atmospheric nitrogen for their metabolic processes?
Atmospheric nitrogen is poisonous to plants
It must first be fixed by cyanobacteria into ammonia
Plants cannot absorb nitrogen unless it is in the form of nitrates
Plants do not need nitrogen for their metabolic processes
It must first be fixed by cyanobacteria into ammonia
According to the principles of the Nitrogen cycle, plants can only absorb nitrogen in the form of ammonia. This is achieved by nitrogen-fixing bacteria that convert atmospheric nitrogen into a form usable by plants. Plants excrete nitrogen in the form of waste as nitrates which are absorbed by animals.
Example Question #1 : Environmental Ecology
The phosphorus cycle is fundamentally different from the nitrogen and sulfur cycles. How so?
The phosphorus cycle does not include a gaseous phase, resulting in no significant quantities of atmospheric phosphorus.
Phosphorus is not fixed in the atmosphere by lightning.
Phosphorus is cycled back into the soil through precipitation.
Phosphorus is not taken up by plants and is a strictly inorganic cycle.
Phosphorus does not enter the cycle from weathering of sediments and parent material.
The phosphorus cycle does not include a gaseous phase, resulting in no significant quantities of atmospheric phosphorus.
The phosphorus cycle does not contain an atmospheric phase, while both the sulfur and nitrogen cycles do.
Example Question #1 : Phosphorus Cycle
Which of the following is the major reservoir for phosphorus in the phosphorus cycle?
Plants
Rock
Animals
Soil
Rainwater
Rock
The reservoir of phosphorus in ecosystems is rock, where it is bound to oxygen in the form of phosphate. As phosphate-rich rocks are exposed and eroded, rainwater dissolves the phosphate. Dissolved phosphate is abosrbed through the roots of plants. Animals eat the plants and after they die decomposers return the phosphorus that remains in the dead bodies back to the soil and water. It may then be reincorporated into rock.
Example Question #1 : Phosphorus Cycle
Which biogeochemical cycle is the only one without an atmospheric component?
The phosphorus cycle
The carbon cycle
The sulfur cycle
The nitrogen cycle
The phosphorus cycle
All of the other cycles have at least one atmospheric component in their systems. The carbon cycle incorporates carbon dioxide in the photosynthesis portion of its cycle. The sulfur cycle incorporates gaseous sulfur dioxide when it is released by volcanic eruptions. The water cycle has the condensation of clouds in the atmosphere and the precipitation of those clouds as well. The nitrogen cycle incorporates atmospheric nitrogen gas before it is fixed by cyanobacteria. Only the phosphorus cycle does not have a phosphorus containing compound in the atmosphere that is essential for life on Earth.
Example Question #4 : Biochemical Cycles
The hydrolytic cycle is driven by which of the following?
Rain
Oceans
Solar energy
Atmosphere
Rivers
Solar energy
The water cycle remains in the form of water throughout the cycle. The major reservoir of water is the ocean. The water cycle is driven by solar energy which evaporates water, and by gravity, which draws water back to Earth in the form of precipitation from water vapor in the atmosphere.
Example Question #1 : Water Cycle
Which answer choice a pair of terms that are the most similar in reference to the water cycle?
Condensation and percolation
Precipitation and percolation
Transpiration and evaporation
Precipitation and runoff
Transpiration and evaporation
Transpiration is the evaporation of water from plants. Both terms can be defined as the conversion of liquid water on Earth into atmospheric water vapor. Condensation is the formation of clouds from water vapor. Precipitation is the release of water from clouds down towards the earth in the form of rain, hail, sleet or snow. Percolation is the seeping of water through the ground into groundwater sources like aquifers. Runoff is excess water on the superficial soil layers that cannot percolate into the ground.
Example Question #2 : Understanding Population Ecology
K-strategist populations are more commonly regulated by ____________ limiting factors, and r-strategist populations are regulated by ___________ limiting factors.
density-dependent, density-independent
density-dependent, density-dependent
density-independent, density-dependent
none of these
density-independent, density-independent
density-dependent, density-independent
K-strategist populations are more commonly regulated by density-dependent limiting factors. Their population sizes hover around a carrying capacity that is dependent on factors that increase in severity with the density of the population. On the other hand, r-strategist populations are regulated by density-independent limiting factors. They reproduce rapidly until a density-independent factor causes many of them to die.
Example Question #2 : Carrying Capacity
How is "cultural carrying capacity" different from "biological carrying capacity?"
Cultural carrying capacity predicts which human populations (depending on factors such as location, weather, and level of city planning) are most likely to develop a set of customs and laws. Biological carrying capacity describes the carrying capacity of each household in the community.
Cultural carrying capacity describes the number of individuals that can exist alongside one another at a reasonable standard of living. Biological carrying capacity describes which species are able to coexist in a niche.
Cultural carrying capacity describes the ability of a human population to thrive and create culture in meager circumstances. Biological carrying capacity describes how many individuals can survive.
Cultural carrying capacity predicts the amount of "melting pot influence" that a society can withstand while still holding on to cultural beliefs and traditions. Biological carrying capacity describes how many individuals can survive.
Cultural carrying capacity describes the number of individuals that can exist alongside one another at a reasonable standard of living. Biological carrying capacity describes how many individuals can survive.
Cultural carrying capacity describes the number of individuals that can exist alongside one another at a reasonable standard of living. Biological carrying capacity describes how many individuals can survive.
Cultural carrying capacity suggests that humans have secondary needs, such as entertainment, palatable food, and mental/spiritual development. These non-vital resources can only be spread equally among a population of a limited size. Cultural carrying capacity describes the limitation on population size after taking into account these factors.
A frequent questions asked by sustainability scientists is: Should the optimum sustainable population be based on cultural carrying capacity? Many would agree yes, for the reason that when cultural capacity is transgressed, living conditions spiral downwards and life is reduced to the struggle for mere survival. In such conditions, human inventiveness and creativity become obsolete.
Example Question #2 : Carrying Capacity
What does a J curve represent on a population growth chart?
A species has reached the carrying capacity but continues to grow, creating a population explosion and a competition for resources
A species has reached carrying capacity and leveled off due to limited resources
The maximum point of growth of a species
A species cycles up to carrying capacity, and then back down to the minimum
The correlation between a species and its competitors in a specific niche
A species has reached the carrying capacity but continues to grow, creating a population explosion and a competition for resources
Population growth can follow either a J curve trend or an S curve trend. A J curve represents exponential, or unrestricted growth. An S curve represents logistic, or restricted, growth and accounts for the carrying capacity of an environment.
In a J curve model, the population will continue to grow even when it has reached capacity. In an S curve model, the population will stagnate and stabilize at a maximum value when capacity is reached.
Example Question #2 : Carrying Capacity
Which is true for clumped distribution patterns?
The distance between individuals in minimized
Sources are abundant throughout the environment
It is rarely seen in nature
It does not affect predation patterns
The distance between individuals in minimized
Clumped distribution patterns localize individuals around scarce resources in environments where they are not equally distributed throughout. The clumping of organisms around these resources attracts predators and makes for easy predation. Because of the scarcity of water in desert, plain and tundra biomes, it is seen in large quantities in nature.
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