
Merit Badge Award Page
List of Merit Badge Requirements
|
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
-
Make a timeline of the history of environmental science in America. Identify the
contribution made by the Boy Scouts of America to environmental science. Include dates,
names of people or organizations, and important events.
-
Define the following terms:
population, community, ecosystem, biosphere, symbiosis, niche,
habitat, conservation, threatened species, endangered species,
extinction, pollution prevention, brownfield, ozone,
watershed, airshed, nonpoint source, hybrid vehicle, fuel cell.
-
Do ONE activity in EACH of the following categories (using the activities in this {the
merit badge} pamphlet as the basis for planning and carrying out your projects):
-
Ecology
-
Conduct an experiment to find out how living things respond to changes in their
environments. Discuss your observations with your counselor.
-
Conduct an experiment illustrating the greenhouse effect. Keep a journal of your data
and observations. Discuss your conclusions with your counselor.
-
Discuss what is an ecosystem. Tell how it is
maintained in nature and how it survives.
-
Air Pollution
-
Perform an experiment to test for particulates that contribute to air pollution. Discuss
your findings with your counselor.
-
Record the trips taken, mileage, and fuel
consumption of a family car for seven days, and calculate
how many miles per gallon the car gets. Determine whether
any trips could have been combined ("chained") rather than
taken out and back. Using the idea of trip chaining,
determine how many miles and gallons of gas could have been
saved in those seven days.
-
Explain what is acid rain. In your
explanation, tell how it affects plants and the environment
and the steps society can take to help reduce its effects.
-
Water Pollution
-
Conduct an experiment to show how living things react to thermal pollution. Discuss your
observations with your counselor.
-
Conduct an experiment to identify the methods that could be used to mediate (reduce) the
effects of an oil spill on waterfowl. Discuss your results with your counselor.
-
Describe the impact of a waterborne
pollutant on an aquatic community. Write a 100-word report
on how that pollutant affected aquatic fife, what the effect
was, and whether the effect is linked to biomagnification.
-
Land Pollution
-
Conduct an experiment to illustrate soil erosion by water. Take photographs or make a
drawing of the soil before and after your experiment, and make a poster showing your
results. Present your poster to your patrol or troop.
(2) Perform an experiment to determine the effect of an oil
spill on land. Discuss your conclusions with your counselor.
-
Perform an experiment to determine the effect of an oil spill on land.
Discuss your conclusions with your counselor.
-
Photograph an area affected by erosion.
Share your photographs with your counselor and discuss why
the area has eroded and what might be done to help alleviate
the erosion.
-
Endangered Species
-
Do research on one endangered species found in your state. Find out what its natural
habitat is, why it is endangered, what is being done to preserve it, and how many
individual organisms are left in the wild. Prepare a 100-word report about the organism,
including a drawing. Present your report to your patrol or troop.
-
Do research on one species that was endangered or threatened but which has now
recovered. Find out how the organism recovered, and what its new status is. Write a
100-word report on the species and discuss it with your counselor.
-
With your parent's and counselor's
approval, work with a natural resource professional to
identify two projects that have been approved to improve the
habitat for a threatened or endangered species in your area.
Visit the site of one of these projects and report on what
you saw.
-
Pollution Prevention, Resource Recovery, and
Conservation
-
Look around your home and determine 10 ways
your family can help reduce pollution. Practice at least two
of these methods for seven days and discuss with your
counselor what you have learned.
-
Determine 10 ways to conserve resources or
use resources more efficiently in your home, at school, or
at camp. Practice at least two of these methods for seven
days and discuss with your counselor what you have learned.
-
Perform an experiment on packaging materials to find out which ones are biodegradable.
Discuss your conclusions with your counselor.
-
Choose two outdoor study areas that are very
different from one another (e.g., hilltop vs. bottom of a hill;
field vs. forest; swamp vs. dry land). For BOTH study areas, do ONE
of the following:
-
Mark off a plot of 4 square yards in each
study area, and count the number of species found there.
Estimate how much space is occupied by each plant species
and the type and number of nonplant species you find. Write
a report that adequately discusses the biodiversity and
population density of these study areas. Discuss your report
with your counselor.
-
Make at least three visits to each of the
two study areas (for a total of six visits), staying for at
least 20 minutes each time, to observe the living and
nonliving parts of the ecosystem. Space each visit far
enough apart that there are readily apparent differences in
the observations. Keep a journal that includes the
differences you observe. Then, write a short report that
adequately addresses your observations, including how the
differences of the study areas might relate to the
differences noted, and discuss this with your counselor.
-
Using the construction project provided or a plan
you create on your own, identify the items that would need to be
included in an environmental impact statement for the project
planned.
-
Find out about three career opportunities in
environmental science. Pick one and find out the education,
training, and experience required for this profession. Discuss this
with your counselor, and explain why this profession might interest
you.
|