NRES 103 Final Exam
In nature, ecosystems are
?
Quagga mussels eventually outnumbered zebra mussels by a huge margin because the former
?
The round goby is considered a generalist species because
?
What prevented water-bound organisms from migrating from the ocean to the upper Great Lakes?
Niagara Falls
What is the process by which toxins reach higher levels in species that are higher up the food chain?
bioaccumulation
Most invasive species are introduced
by humans
The diet of the round goby includes
-eggs of other fish -young of larger fish -zooplankton -young zebra and quagga mussels
The EPA exempted the discharge of ballast water from the Clean Water Act
-even though they did not have Congressional approval to do so -because doing so would reduce administrative costs -because they thought it was relatively harmless
Native mussels in the Great Lakes helped to maintain water clarity by
-filtering organic material from the water column -eating algae
Ballast serves a key function on freighters because
-it provides stability to an empty ship -it is heavy, readily available, and basically free
The lamprey moved slowly through Lake Erie because
-it was relatively shallow -it was relatively warm -it lacked suitable spawning streams
The zebra mussel, quagga mussel, and round goby
-likely reached the Great Lakes in the ballast of a freighter -have their native range in the Black and/or Caspian Seas -first appeared in North America in or near Lake St. Clair
The alewife came to dominate native fish in the Great Lakes by
-preying on their young -outcompeting them for food
There were fewer alewives in Lake Erie because, compared to the other upper Lakes, it is
-shallower -warmer
A key problem with the St. Lawrence Seaway was
-the 9-month shipping season -that the locks and channels were too small
Features of zebra mussels that enabled them to be such successful invaders include
-their ability to reproduce at a relatively young age -the ability of females to produce so many eggs -a lack of native predators in the Great Lakes -their high filtration rate
Which of the following factors contributes to the uniqueness of the Great Lakes?
-they are geographically concentrated -connectivity -the location
One way that gobies can gain a numerical advantage on native fish is that
-they spawn up to three times per summer -they are voracious egg eaters -they drive other fish from their spawning beds
The St. Lawrence Seaway was constructed
-to allow ocean-going freighters access to the Great Lakes -because the U.S. President saw strategic value there during the cold war with the USSR
The last glacier withdrew from North America about
12,000 years ago
How much of the planet's available freshwater is found in the Great Lakes?
20%
What is the shallowest of the Great Lakes?
Erie
Compared to the Erie Canal, the Welland Canal
accommodated longer and wider ships
Another ballast hitch-hiker, the Eurasian ruffe, became a very successful invader in the Great Lakes, largely due to
an extremely high reproductive rate
Botulism-causing bacteria spread up the food chain after
being ingested by invasive mussels
In the scientific method, predictions are generated from hypotheses, then tested with
data
Which of the following is not a feature that the Great Lakes share with the oceans?
downdrafts (it does have currents, upwelling, & waves)
The west-to-east flow of the Great Lakes is due to differences in
elevation
The first European to explore the St. Lawrence River was Jacques Cartier, but after 1000 miles he had to turn back because his party
encountered impassible rapids
In recent decades, what is the primary factor that has led to an exponential increase in the movement of invasive species?
global connectivity
At this point in time, what is the biggest problem facing the Great Lakes?
human ignorance
Zebra mussels impact native mussels directly
inhibiting their ability to open their shells
A key difference between non-native (or exotic) species and invasive species is that
invasives tend to cause negative environmental consequences
Rather than a food chain, it's more accurate to think in terms of a food web because
it focuses on trophic relationships as a network
Who eats who in the Great Lakes is not necessarily linear, as exemplified by the lake sturgeon because
it is quite large yet eats small prey items
Compared to the Europeans, the Woodland Culture was
lacking in some ways but equal or superior in others
Even though zebra mussels can only move about 14" an hour using their 'foot,' they can rapidly reach new locations because
offspring are covered with hairs that help them to catch currents
Rain, snow, and surface runoff from streams and rivers add water to the Great Lakes, but this is offset by
outflow
The film clip "The Rise and Fall of the Great Lakes" describes a number of geologic phenomena that have changed the lakes over time. One of these has to do with the transition from a northerly outflow of Great Lakes water to a southerly course. This transition was caused by
rising land surface after the glacier's retreat
An extreme form of wave action in the Great Lakes that is associated with rapid changes in wind and barometric pressure is known as a
seiche
On an annual basis, the Soo Locks handle more ships and more tonnage
than the Panama and Suez Canals combined
Detractors of the St. Lawrence Seaway believed
that it would ruin the business of U.S. ports on the eastern seaboard
At one point, the Great Lakes were connected to
the Atlantic Ocean
In a sense, it could be said that the Clean Water Act had its origins in
the Cuyahoga River
There have been a number of unintended environmental consequences that have adversely affected the Lakes once they were connected to the Atlantic Ocean and connections among the lakes were modified by human activity. A key reason that the consequences were so profound is that
the Lakes are relatively young
Which of the following is a Native American tribe that the French did not encounter in the Great Lakes region?
the Sioux (they did encounter the Iroquois, the Winnebagoes, and the Hurons)
Vernon Applegate was able to help reduce lamprey populations by focusing on
the creeks where lampreys nest
Which of the following does not serve as an example of the dynamic nature of the Great Lakes over geographic time?
the salt concentration of Lake Michigan has been steadily increasing over the last 1000 years (-Michigan (the state and the lake) was once covered by the Wisconsin Glacier -Sleeping Bear Dune is moving inland at the rate of 2 feet per year -Paleo-indians once hunted mastadons in Michigan are all examples of this)
According to the film "What's So Great About the Great Lakes", of the five lakes, Superior is not
the stormiest (it is the clearest, deepest, and coldest)
All energy is derived from
the sun
The zebra mussel could not have 'walked' across the Atlantic Ocean to reach the Great Lakes, even over many generations, because
they could not have survived the ocean's salinity or depth
There was a mistake made in naming Lakes Michigan and Huron. What was it?
they're actually one lake
It's thought that lampreys first entered Lake Ontario
through the Erie Canal
The primary mission of the early French explorers of the Great Lakes was
to find a passage to the Great South Sea and Cathay
In the film The St. Lawrence Seaway System, the proposed way to get around the fact that the locks and channels were too small for transoceanic ships was
to unload cargo and put it on smaller ships
A key commercial use of the Great Lakes ever since the days of La Salle involves
transportation
The concept of a food chain is all about what type of relationships?
trophic
Turnover of water, or mixing, in lakes is important in terms of maintaining
water quality
Fisheries managers were surprised to learn that chinook salmon
were reproducing in the wild in prodigious numbers
The scientific method is initiated
with observations