Category
page 2Environmental science
noise regulation
noise control by legal regulation of noise-producing items
environmental impact statement
assessment required for federally funded projects in the United States
arctic ecology
study of the relationships between biotic and abiotic factors in the arctic
Space Situational Awareness Programme
European Space Agency program
Leopold matrix
Environmental impact assessment method
environmental analysis
analyzing chemical and biological factors that determine the quality of an environment, like pollutants

Science Based Targets initiative
international collaboration
climate target
limit on CO₂, the central policy instrument for emissions reductions
idealized greenhouse model
mathematical estimate of planetary temperatures
Microbial biodegradation
environmental informatics
information science applied to environmental science
CAB Direct
database of bibliographic records in the life sciences
Janzen–Connell hypothesis
explanation for tree species biodiversity in rainforests
BioSand Filter
water filtration technique
environmental persistent pharmaceutical pollutant
Micropollutants are substances that even at very low concentrations have adverse effects on different environmental matrices. They are an inhomogeneous group of anthroprogenic chemical compounds that is discharged by human to the environment. Commonly known micropollutants that might pose possible threats to ecological environments are, to name just a few:
environmental persistent pharmaceutical pollutants and personal care products,
pesticides,
stimulants,
persistent organic pollutants,
and artificial sweeteners
To date, most of the scientists have identified wastewater treatment plants
assimilative capacity
ability to absorb pollution
Water resource policy
policy-making processes and legislation that affect water resources