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Explore the similarities and differences between different biogeochemical cycles, such as the water, carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus cycles. Learn about the processes that move matter through ecosystems and the biosphere.
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BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES Law of Conservation of Matter – matter cannot be created or destroyed but it can be rearranged Matter is constantly moving between the living and nonliving world.
Questions to answer: How are the cycles for different kinds of matter similar? How are they different? What cycles do I need to know? Water cycle (hydrologic) Carbon cycle Nitrogen cycle Phosphorus
Questions to answer: What processes move matter (nutrients) through the ecosystem and biosphere? Bio = life Geo = earth Chem = chemical
Questions to answer: MATTER? Examples: Pathway: PROCESSES? What do I already know about this?
Vocabulary Recall Organic compound – contains carbon, large molecules; ex. carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, nucleic acids Inorganic compound – small molecules, do not need to contain carbon; ex. water, carbon dioxide
Vocabulary Recall Biotic factor – a living thing,ex. plant, animal, fungus, protist, bacterium Abiotic factor – a nonliving thing, ex. light, moisture, wind, temperature
GENERAL MODEL OF NUTRIENT CYCLING • Organic materials: available as nutrients • Biotic: living things, detritus (decaying organic matter) • Organic material: unavailable as nutrients • Coal, oil, peat • Inorganic materials: unavailable as nutrients • Minerals in rocks • Inorganic materials: available as nutrients • Abiotic: soil, atmosphere, water
RESERVOIR • Areas in the environment where significant amounts of an element are found • Ex. one of nitrogen’s reservoirs is the atmosphere • Ex. one of carbon’s reservoir is the bodies of living things HOW did I represent the reservoirs in the previous slides?
PROCESS: PHOTOSYNTHESIS • A complex series of chemical reactions carried out by plants and algae • Requires chlorophyll (a green pigment) and chloroplasts (organelles within cells) • Organic compounds such as GLUCOSE are built from inorganic compounds – WATER AND CARBON DIOXIDE • LIGHT supplies the ENERGY for this REARRANGEMENT OF MATTER
PROCESS: PHOTOSYNTHESIS LIGHT 6 CO2 + 6 H2O C6H12O6 +6 O2 carbon water glucose oxygen dioxide (food)
PROCESS: PHOTOSYNTHESIS LIGHT 6 CO2 + 6 H2O C6H12O6 +6 O2 carbon water glucose oxygen dioxide (food) reactants products
PROCESS: RESPIRATION • Complex series of chemical reactions carried out by all cells • Requires mitochondria (organelles within cells) • FOOD (organic compounds such as GLUCOSE) is broken down into inorganic compounds – WATER AND CARBON • Potential ENERGY stored in chemical bonds of food is TRANSFERRED to a form cells can use for energy - a molecule called ATP
PROCESS: RESPIRATION C6H12O6 +6 O2 6 CO2 + 6 H2O glucose oxygen carbon water (food) dioxide reactants products Does this look familiar?
PROCESS: RESPIRATION CELLULAR RESPIRATION is NOT THE SAME THING AS BREATHING.
PROCESS: DECOMPOSITION • Series of chemical reactions in which decomposers break down large organic compounds into smaller inorganic compounds • The decomposers – FUNGI AND BACTERIA – are using dead organisms for food • THEREFORE, the decomposers and fungi are carrying out CELLULAR RESPIRATION!
PROCESSES: EXCRETION • WASTE PRODUCTS • Examples: urine, feces
PROCESSES: FOSSILIZATION • Fossils - remains of organisms that lived in the past • In the case of coal and oil, plants died and were covered by sediments • Heat, pressure, and time released most of the elements except CARBON AND HYDORGEN • Coal and oil are “hydrocarbons” – they contain carbon and hydrogen that was once in a plant (Where were C & H before they were in the plant?)
PROCESSES: ROCK FORMATION, EROSION, WEATHERING • Rock Formation – when layers of sediments are placed under pressure for long periods of time sedimentary rock forms • Weathering – “BREAK DOWN” - wind, water, freezing and thawing, and chemical processes break rock back down into sediments
PROCESSES: ROCK FORMATION, EROSION, WEATHERING • Erosion – “MOVEMENT TO ANOTHER PLACE” - wind and water move sediments on the earth’s surface
HOW DOES THE MOVEMENT OF MATTER THROUGH THE BIOSPHERE (ECOSPHERE, ORGANISM, AND CELL) DIFFER FROM THE MOVEMENT OF ENERGY?
MATTER ENERGY