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Review – Cycles, tectonic boundaries, and environmental laws. Cycles. One-way of energy Cycling of matter. The Nitrogen Cycle. 78% of the troposphere is composed of nitrogen gas. Nitrogen is an important element for the making of proteins, nucleic acids, and vitamins. The Nitrogen Cycle.
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Review – Cycles, tectonic boundaries, and environmental laws
Cycles • One-way of energy • Cycling of matter
The Nitrogen Cycle • 78% of the troposphere is composed of nitrogen gas. • Nitrogen is an important element for the making of proteins, nucleic acids, and vitamins.
Processes convert nitrogen gas into compounds that can be used in the food webs: • Atmospheric electrical discharge makes nitrogen and oxygen gases react to form nitrogen oxide. • Specialized bacteria fix nitrogen gas into ammonia to be used by plants (nitrogen fixation). • Ammonia not used by plants may go through nitrification to form nitrite ions (toxic to plants) and nitrate ions (easily taken up by plants).
After nitrogen fixation and nitrification… • Plant roots absorb these dissolved substances called assimilation and use them to form DNA and proteins. Animals consume nitrogen through plants or plant-eating animals. • In ammonification, decomposer bacteria convert waste into simpler nitrogen-containing compounds such as ammonia and water-soluble salts containing ammonium ions. • Nitrogen returns to the atmosphere through denitrificationby converting ammonia and ammonium ions into nitrite and nitrate ions and then into nitrogen gas and nitrous oxide gas. • This begins the cycle again.
How do we impact the nitrogen cycle? • Adding nitric oxide (NO) which can convert to nitrogen dioxide gas (NO2) and nitric acid (HNO3) causes ___________ • Adding nitrous oxide (N2O) through anaerobic bacteria and inorganic fertilizer causes _________ • Adding nitrates to aquatic ecosystems causes _____________
The Carbon Cycle • Cycle is based on carbon dioxide gas. • Key component of nature’s thermostat.
Environmental Laws • Clean Air Act (1970, 1977, 1990) • Regulates air emissions from area, stationary, and mobile sources • Established National Ambient Air Quality Standards • Clean Water Act • Sets wastewater industry standards • Set water quality standards for all contaminants in surface water • Made clear it’s unlawful to discharge pollutants from point source • Endangered Species Act • Maintains list of endangered and threatened species to prohibit the taking of a listed species or adversely affect habitat
Environmental Laws • Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act • Controls pesticide distribution, sale and use • Gives EPA authority to study usage • Forces user to register • Oil Pollution Act of 1990 • Strengthens EPA’s ability to prevent and respond to catastrophic oil spills • Makes funds available for cleanup through a trust fund financed by taxes • Pollution Prevention Act • Reduces amount of pollution through cost-effectives changes in production, operation, and raw material use
Environmental Laws • Toxic Substances Control Act • Tracks the 75,000 chemicals currently produced or imported into the United States • Food Quality Protection Act • Requires a safety standard-reasonable certain of no harm that must be applied to all pesticides used on food