Exam 16: Marine and Coastal Systems and Resources
Exam 1: Science and Sustainability: an Introduction to Environmental Science45 Questions
Exam 2: Earths Physical Systems: Matter, Energy, and Geology49 Questions
Exam 3: Evolution, Biodiversity, and Population Ecology46 Questions
Exam 4: Species Interactions and Community Ecology53 Questions
Exam 5: Environmental Systems and Ecosystem Ecology47 Questions
Exam 6: Ethics, Economics, and Sustainable Development47 Questions
Exam 7: Environmental Policy: Making Decisions and Solving Problems48 Questions
Exam 8: Human Population55 Questions
Exam 9: Soil and Agriculture50 Questions
Exam 10: Agriculture, Biotechnology, and the Future of Food49 Questions
Exam 11: Biodiversity and Conservation Biology45 Questions
Exam 12: Forests, Forest Management, and Protected Areas45 Questions
Exam 13: The Urban Environment: Creating Sustainable Cities50 Questions
Exam 14: Environmental Health and Toxicology53 Questions
Exam 15: Freshwater Systems and Resources48 Questions
Exam 16: Marine and Coastal Systems and Resources54 Questions
Exam 17: Atmospheric Science, Air Quality, and Pollution Control45 Questions
Exam 18: Global Climate Change49 Questions
Exam 19: Fossil Fuels, Their Impacts, and Energy Conservation46 Questions
Exam 20: Conventional Energy Alternatives55 Questions
Exam 21: New Renewable Energy Alternatives48 Questions
Exam 22: Managing Our Waste48 Questions
Exam 23: Minerals and Mining35 Questions
Exam 24: Sustainable Solutions47 Questions
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Discuss how fishing practices can damage ecosystems. Include problems associated with driftnets, longline fishing, and bottom- trawling.
(Essay)
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The rapid melting of Greenland's ice cap could disrupt the NADW formation by ______________
(Multiple Choice)
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Use the accompanying figure to answer the following question
-Which of the following is true of eutrophication in marine systems?

(Multiple Choice)
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Read the following scenario and answer the question below.
Diets that incorporate seafood can be healthy for us and kind to the environment. However, all seafood is not comparable, so choice is important. Mollusks such as oysters, mussels, and scallops are good choices if they are grown suspended in water, because dredging for these mollusks damages seafloors. On fish farms, this involves growing organisms on nets, trays, or racks. Because mollusks are filter feeders, farmed mollusks can actually improve water quality. Although shrimp are also filter feeders, shrimp farms, especially in Southeast Asia, are often built in coastal areas where mangroves are destroyed to make room for farms. As long as excessive quantities of grain or wild fish are not used for feed, aquaculture can be a very good alternative to open ocean fishing because it can reduce bycatch, the pressure on wild stocks, and the fossil fuel use required at sea. Exceptions are farms that raise transgenic salmon, which often spread disease, or where the farmed fish become oversized and outcompete the native fish. These salmon consume massive quantities of fish feed, so better fish choices are farm-raised talapia, striped bass, and sturgeon.
In the wild, Pacific halibut, salmon, sablefish, and sardines are good choices because they are fished selectively. Wild grouper, shark, swordfish, tuna, and orange roughy must be consumed cautiously because water they inhabit usually contains high levels of mercury, PCBs, dioxins, or pesticides, which can biomagnify in food webs and bioaccumulate in fish tissues. Wild Chilean sea bass, Atlantic cod, and Atlantic halibut should be avoided because their populations have been overfished. Orange roughy have been overfished, reproduce slowly, and are fished with bottom-trawlers that frequently damage bottom habitat.
-Farm-raised shrimp are not a good environmental seafood choice because ______________.
(Multiple Choice)
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Tree- dominated ecosystem in tropical and subtropical latitudes that consists of gently sloping sandy and silty coastal areas
(Multiple Choice)
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Discuss the importance of the goods and services that ocean ecosystems provide for humans.
(Essay)
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Explain how increased atmospheric carbon dioxide levels and warmer coastal waters resulting from global climate change may affect coral reefs.
(Essay)
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The area that underlies the shallow water bordering continents is called the ______________
(Multiple Choice)
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What are the motives for establishing marine sanctuaries and reserves?
(Essay)
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Read the following scenario and answer the question below.
Diets that incorporate seafood can be healthy for us and kind to the environment. However, all seafood is not comparable, so choice is important. Mollusks such as oysters, mussels, and scallops are good choices if they are grown suspended in water, because dredging for these mollusks damages seafloors. On fish farms, this involves growing organisms on nets, trays, or racks. Because mollusks are filter feeders, farmed mollusks can actually improve water quality. Although shrimp are also filter feeders, shrimp farms, especially in Southeast Asia, are often built in coastal areas where mangroves are destroyed to make room for farms. As long as excessive quantities of grain or wild fish are not used for feed, aquaculture can be a very good alternative to open ocean fishing because it can reduce bycatch, the pressure on wild stocks, and the fossil fuel use required at sea. Exceptions are farms that raise transgenic salmon, which often spread disease, or where the farmed fish become oversized and outcompete the native fish. These salmon consume massive quantities of fish feed, so better fish choices are farm-raised talapia, striped bass, and sturgeon.
In the wild, Pacific halibut, salmon, sablefish, and sardines are good choices because they are fished selectively. Wild grouper, shark, swordfish, tuna, and orange roughy must be consumed cautiously because water they inhabit usually contains high levels of mercury, PCBs, dioxins, or pesticides, which can biomagnify in food webs and bioaccumulate in fish tissues. Wild Chilean sea bass, Atlantic cod, and Atlantic halibut should be avoided because their populations have been overfished. Orange roughy have been overfished, reproduce slowly, and are fished with bottom-trawlers that frequently damage bottom habitat.
-Which of the following is not true about aquaculture?
(Multiple Choice)
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Ocean zone where water is dense and sluggish and not affected by winds, sunlight, and daily temperature fluctuations
(Multiple Choice)
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A 2003 study reported that ______________% of large- bodied fish and sharks were lost in the first decade of industrialized fishing.
(Multiple Choice)
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About 80% of the ocean's water exists in the ______________.
(Multiple Choice)
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In thermohaline circulation of global current systems, surface water is _______________.
(Multiple Choice)
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Read the following scenario and answer the question below.
Diets that incorporate seafood can be healthy for us and kind to the environment. However, all seafood is not comparable, so choice is important. Mollusks such as oysters, mussels, and scallops are good choices if they are grown suspended in water, because dredging for these mollusks damages seafloors. On fish farms, this involves growing organisms on nets, trays, or racks. Because mollusks are filter feeders, farmed mollusks can actually improve water quality. Although shrimp are also filter feeders, shrimp farms, especially in Southeast Asia, are often built in coastal areas where mangroves are destroyed to make room for farms. As long as excessive quantities of grain or wild fish are not used for feed, aquaculture can be a very good alternative to open ocean fishing because it can reduce bycatch, the pressure on wild stocks, and the fossil fuel use required at sea. Exceptions are farms that raise transgenic salmon, which often spread disease, or where the farmed fish become oversized and outcompete the native fish. These salmon consume massive quantities of fish feed, so better fish choices are farm-raised talapia, striped bass, and sturgeon.
In the wild, Pacific halibut, salmon, sablefish, and sardines are good choices because they are fished selectively. Wild grouper, shark, swordfish, tuna, and orange roughy must be consumed cautiously because water they inhabit usually contains high levels of mercury, PCBs, dioxins, or pesticides, which can biomagnify in food webs and bioaccumulate in fish tissues. Wild Chilean sea bass, Atlantic cod, and Atlantic halibut should be avoided because their populations have been overfished. Orange roughy have been overfished, reproduce slowly, and are fished with bottom-trawlers that frequently damage bottom habitat.
-Why are marine reserves ecologically better than fish farms?
(Multiple Choice)
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