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Export To Word
Export To Word

... of communicable and chronic diseases. Assess the effectiveness of innovative methods of protecting the environment. Describe how human population size and resource use relate to environmental quality. Describe how different natural resources are produced and how their rates of use and renewal limit ...
APES Review - Dave Mundy, North Kitsap High School Science
APES Review - Dave Mundy, North Kitsap High School Science

... 8. What is an ecological niche? Distinguish between specialist species and generalist species and give an 6. What is speciation? Distinguish between geographic example of each. isolation and reproductive isolation and explain how they can lead to the formation of a new species. 9. Distinguish among ...
13.1 Ecologists Study Relationships
13.1 Ecologists Study Relationships

... • Oily water may kill off the phytoplankton • The loss of smaller fish would affect the larger fish, which would, in turn, affect tertiary consumers. • Plants and animals that live along the coast would also be affected as oil seeped onto the shore. • The overall affect would be a decline in the ava ...
c. operant conditioning.
c. operant conditioning.

... Based on these statements, which principle(s) of effective punishment does Marcie seem to violate? a. Punishment should immediately follow behavior. b. Physical punishment should be avoided. c. Punishment should be used in conjunction with reinforcement. d. She seems to violate all of these principl ...
History and Status of Introduced Rhesus Macaques
History and Status of Introduced Rhesus Macaques

... these cases were fatal, and other infected humans suffered permanent neurological damage. It is unknown why there has only been documentation of human infection from macaques in laboratories and not from wild macaques, despite prevalence of Herpes B infection in both captive and wild macaques. Futur ...
Conservation Biology for All
Conservation Biology for All

... Box 16.6: Useful textbook guides (Corey J. A. Bradshaw and Barry W. Brook) Summary Suggested reading Relevant websites Acknowledgements Index ...
Impact of Tourism on Wildlife Conservation
Impact of Tourism on Wildlife Conservation

... 1.2.1 Wildlife watching and how it relates to tourism Wildlife is one of the components of biodiversity. It is a general term that technically covers both flora and fauna, although this document will cover fauna only. In popular use, wildlife mostly refers to animals in the wild. Perhaps a classic i ...
pdf reprint
pdf reprint

... themes decades later. In empirical studies, ecologists began to recognize that fragment size changed community structure (Bond 1957). In theoretical studies, Preston (1962) connected species–area relationships on islands to nature reserves, whose fragmentation – reduced size and increased isolation ...
Background
Background

... spiritual level. In tribal legends passed down through the generations, wolf, coyote and fox are related to one another and to the tribal peoples. Individual experiences with the wolf more often than not resulted in life-changing lessons. These experiences strengthened the connection between all sur ...
Livestock predation by lions, leopards, spotted hyenas
Livestock predation by lions, leopards, spotted hyenas

... In regions with widespread livestock predation, pastoralists retaliate by indiscriminately killing predators (Woodroffe, 2001; Polisar et al., 2003; Treves & Karanth, 2003; Kolowski & Holekamp, 2006). While several studies have documented retaliatory killing of African carnivores (e.g. Ogada et al., ...
Streaked horned lark habitat selection and restoration, by Scott F
Streaked horned lark habitat selection and restoration, by Scott F

... natives? To reduce invasive species, soils and prior land-use activities must be taken into account. Restoring Fauna: It has become clear that that “if you build it, they will not necessary come,” especially invertebrates. How to reintroduce species to prairies? ...
Alberta Whitebark and Limber Pine Recovery Planning
Alberta Whitebark and Limber Pine Recovery Planning

... • Plans nearing completion… ...
Quantifying the evidence for biodiversity effects on ecosystem
Quantifying the evidence for biodiversity effects on ecosystem

... repeated measures were used to derive a new variable such as temporal variation in the ecosystem property, these data were included. We did not include studies that compared monocultures with mixtures of a single higher diversity level or single-species removal experiments. We used all records that ...
The Caucasus Hotspot Briefing Book
The Caucasus Hotspot Briefing Book

... from six countries to reach a consensus in this politically complicated region. They also generated commitment from all stakeholders for implementation of proposed directions. This ecosystem profile, together with profiles under development for CEPF in other regions at this time, includes a new comm ...
Global amphibian declines: sorting the hypotheses - Collins Lab
Global amphibian declines: sorting the hypotheses - Collins Lab

... south-western Ontario will likely result in less diverse amphibian communities consisting mainly of green frogs [Rana clamitans], leopard frogs [Rana pipiens], and American toads [Bufo americanus]’ (Hecnar & M’Closkey, 1998: 770). Historically, this region supported 13 species of frogs and salamande ...
A Species Action Plan for the Suwannee Cooter
A Species Action Plan for the Suwannee Cooter

... and to maintain or increase population sizes in each river where it naturally occurs. Major strategies for achieving these objectives are to maintain the current regulatory protections; maintain or enhance the water quality, water quantity, and habitat characteristics of occupied rivers, including n ...
file - ORCA
file - ORCA

... 2. ON THE MEANING OF ‘REWILDING’  ...
Understanding Rangeland Biodiversity
Understanding Rangeland Biodiversity

... livestock) interests are influential with government as in Central Asia, Australia and parts of the New World, powerful administrative structures are established to prevent encroachment on ranches, for example. Nowhere in the world do foraging peoples have the power to prevent their land being alien ...
Informing Biodiversity Conservation for the Adelaide and Mount
Informing Biodiversity Conservation for the Adelaide and Mount

... of the original native vegetation of the region remains, based on current mapping. The AMLR represents a highly fragmented landscape, with isolated remnants of native vegetation embedded in a matrix of urban and agricultural land uses. There are few intact areas remaining in the region. Most native ...
Parasitoid Wasps, Natural Enemies of Insects
Parasitoid Wasps, Natural Enemies of Insects

... resulting host’s dead tissue. Askew (1971) used the term “protelean parasites” to name parasitoids and true parasites, but it has been dropped out. At present the term ‘parasitoid’ is used more often to describe an organism using this mode of life. ...
Chapter 7
Chapter 7

... households and drawing the numbers from a randomized table. Respondents were interviewed about number of livestock owned, livestock management, number of livestock lost to predation from 2006 to 2010 due to leopards, spotted hyenas and jackals. To quantify the economic cost of livestock depredation, ...
Chapter 6 Learning
Chapter 6 Learning

... activity in the UCS center automatically causes activation of the UCR center. At this time activity of the CS center does not affect the UCS center. (b) After sufficient pairings of the CS and UCS, their simultaneous activity causes the growth of a connection between the CS and UCS centers. Afterwar ...
shorebird management and conservation report
shorebird management and conservation report

... for most species of shorebirds. At high tide shorebirds either rest in roosts close by the low-tide feeding grounds, or feed if high tide feeding grounds are available. Site significance varies according to whether one is concerned about habitat for migratory birds that use a specific flyway, all sh ...
CBD Strategy and Action Plan
CBD Strategy and Action Plan

... Promoting agricultural production that has an enhanced focus on biodiversity conservation ................................................................................................................ 169 Promoting soil cultivation, fertilization and pest/weed control with an enhanced focus on bio ...
Chapter 5
Chapter 5

... • Learning: any relatively permanent change in behavior brought about by experience or practice – When people learn anything, some part of their brain is physically changed to record what they have learned. – Any kind of change in the way an organism behaves is learning. ...
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Conservation psychology

Conservation psychology is the scientific study of the reciprocal relationships between humans and the rest of nature, with a particular focus on how to encourage conservation of the natural world. Rather than a specialty area within psychology itself, it is a growing field for scientists, researchers, and practitioners of all disciplines to come together and better understand the earth and what can be done to preserve it. This network seeks to understand why humans hurt or help the environment and what can be done to change such behavior. The term ""conservation psychology"" refers to any fields of psychology that have understandable knowledge about the environment and the effects humans have on the natural world. Conservation psychologists use their abilities in ""greening"" psychology and make society ecologically sustainable. The science of conservation psychology is oriented toward environmental sustainability, which includes concerns like the conservation of resources, conservation of ecosystems, and quality of life issues for humans and other species.One common issue is a lack of understanding of the distinction between conservation psychology and the more-established field of environmental psychology, which is the study of transactions between individuals and all their physical settings, including how people change both the built and the natural environments and how those environments change them. Environmental psychology began in the late 1960s (the first formal program with that name was established at the City University of New York in 1968), and is the term most commonly used around the world. Its definition as including human transactions with both the natural and built environments goes back to its beginnings, as exemplified in these quotes from three 1974 textbooks: ""Environmental psychology is the study of the interrelationship between behavior and the built and natural environment"" and ""...the natural environment is studied as both a problem area, with respect to environmental degradation, and as a setting for certain recreational and psychological needs"", and a third that included a chapter entitled The Natural Environment and Behavior.Conservation psychology, proposed more recently in 2003 and mainly identified with a group of US academics with ties to zoos and environmental studies departments, began with a primary focus on the relations between humans and animals. Introduced in ecology, policy, and biology journals, some have suggested that it should be expanded to try to understand why humans feel the need to help or hurt the environment, along with how to promote conservation efforts.
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