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Nutrient Cycles & how Humans impact nutrient cycling. Bio1. Where do energy & nutrients come from?. What are nutrients? What else do organisms need to survive and grow? Organisms need _______ , ______ , and a number of key elements like _______ , _______ , ________ , and _________ .
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Where do energy & nutrients come from? What are nutrients? What else do organisms need to survive and grow? Organisms need _______, ______, and a number of key elements like _______, _______, ________, and _________. How do organisms get all of the above? Energy water carbon oxygen nitrogen hydrogen
Energy Flows, Nutrients Cycle Energy enters the biosphere continually from _________. However, all the water and matter (the stuff) organisms need to survive already exists in the biosphere -- it simply gets ______ over and over. If the water & matter we need to live wasn’t ________, we would eventually run out. We have no other source of these things entering the biosphere. So the recycling of matter is very important. How does matter get recycled? A variety of ways… the SUN reused recycled
The Water Cycle Atmospheric water vapor (13) condensation condensation Water content of oceans (1,380,000) Water content of sedimentary rocks near earth’s surface (210,000) #’s in parentheses indicate amount of water as billion billion (1018) grams/yr
Water Cycles Through the Biosphere… • 1a: Liquid water in rivers, lakes & oceans evaporates as it turns into water vapor (gas). • 1b: Water vapor is also released from plants during transpiration. • 2: Water vapor in atmosphere condenses to form clouds (liquid again). • 3: Water returns to earth during precipitation. • 4: Precipitation over land may runoff into bodies of water or infiltrate the soil and percolate into the ground to become groundwater (which is stored in aquifers). • 5: Water in ground is absorbed by plants through roots. Surface water & groundwater flows to ocean. • Now go back to the beginning…
Water Cycle is Affected by Human Action • Clearing vegetation from land for agriculture, mining, road & building construction often increases runoff and can reduce infiltration that recharges underground water supplies • Use of groundwater for irrigation increases evaporation over land and depletes groundwater supplies (aquifer depletion). Ex) Ogallala aquifer (world’s largest known aquifer) • Found under parts of WY, SD, NE, KA, CO, OK, NM, TX • Used to irrigate vast areas of arid high-plains prairie into one of largest, most-productive agricultural regions in US (produces 1/5 of US agricultural output) • In some areas, water is being pumped out 8-10 times faster than the (slow) natural recharge rate
Carbon Cycle Decomposers (bacteria in soil & others) Dead Plants and Animals
Carbon: From Air to Organism • Carbon dioxide (CO2) in air is used by ______ during _____________. • Carbon moves from CO2 in atmosphere into sugars in plants. plants photosynthesis CO2 + H2O + sunlight --> C6H12O6 + O2
Carbon: From Organism to Air • Organic compounds (like C6H12O6) in plants, animals and microbes are used (“burned”) as an energy source. This process, which organisms carry out to release energy from their food, is called __________________. • As part of this process, waste ____ is released. cellular respiration C6H12O6 + O2 --> CO2 + H2O + ATP (chemical energy) CO2
Other Ways Carbon Circulates (including Human Impact) http://www.rspbliverpool.org.uk/joint%20coach%20trips.htm • Burning of forests or other organic matter releases CO and CO2 into the atmosphere. • Burning of fossil fuels (_____, ___, __________) for industry, transportation, and municipal energy production also releases CO and CO2. • Anaerobic bacteria (like those in mammalian digestive systems) produce _____________ (CH4) as a byproduct of their metabolism. oil coal petroleum methane gas
Carbon Cycle Decomposers (bacteria in soil & others) Dead Plants and Animals
Nitrogen Cycle Ammonia (NH3) taken in by legumes Dead Plants & Animals Decomposers Ammonia (NH3)
Nitrogen: From Air to Soil • Why do organisms need nitrogen? • Molecular nitrogen gas (N2) in atmosphere not directly usable by most organisms • 1: ________________ bacteria in legume root nodules and in soil “fix” nitrogen, converting N2 into ammonia (NH3) Nitrogen-fixing Clover root nodules inhabited by Rhizobium bacteria
Nitrogen: From Soil to Plant • 2: Some ammonia in soil is used directly by plants (absorbed through roots) to make _____________, but many plants still cannot use this form of nitrogen. • 3: Most ammonia in soil is converted to nitrite (NO2-) and then nitrate (NO3-) by _________ bacteria. • 4: Nitrate (NO3-) is the form of nitrogen that most plants can absorb (through roots) and use to make _____________. plant proteins nitrifying plant proteins
Nitrogen: From Plant to Animal to Soil Again! • 5: Animals get their nitrogen by ____________________________ . • 6: Plants & animals die, are broken down by _____________ bacteria, producing ________________ in the soil again. • Guess what can happen to this _____ now? eating plants and other animals decomposing ammonia (NH3) NH3 • can be assimilated (taken in & used) by Plants to make Proteins • can be used by Nitrifying Bacteria & converted to Nitrate
Nitrogen: From Soil to Air again • 7: __________ bacteria in soil convert nitrites & nitrates to molecular nitrogen gas • This is especially true in low O2 conditions • Implications for farmers? Denitrifying
Other Factors in the Nitrogen Cycle • Nitrogen fixation also occurs in some amount due to lightening strikes • Nitrogen compounds also released into atmosphere by volcanoes
Nitrogen Cycle Dead Plants & Animals Decomposers Ammonia (NH3)
Human Effects on Nitrogen Cycle • Nitrogen oxides emitted from the combustion of fossil fuels (from industry, transportation) • Excess nitrogen compounds released into environment via improper disposal of livestock waste/manure (think pig poop) or even untreated human sewage • Nitrate and phosphate-rich fertilizers used heavily in agriculture ==> can lead to ______________ (enrichment of a previously limiting nutrient) of freshwater ecosystems due to fertilizer-contaminated runoff from farmland. What’s so bad about this? Let’s see… eutrophication
Eutrophication Effects (in pictures) Also check out: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eutrophication