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Biogeochemical Cycles: the exchange of matter through the biosphere
Water Cycle Nitrogen Cycle Carbon Cycle
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Water Cycle
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Water Cycle All living organisms require fresh water
Freshwater constitutes only about 3% all water on Earth
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Water Cycle Evaporation: water molecules break free from oceans and lakes Purifies water Transpiration: a process in which water evaporates from the surface of plants
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Condensation: H2O molecules rise in the atmosphere—cool—slow down
Falls to Earth as precipitate (rain, snow, etc) Percolation: water is purified through filtration when it trickles through loose soil
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H2O carried from lakes to oceans by streams, run-off (on ground) flows into lakes and oceans, ground water travels under ground to oceans H2O is also given off by living organisms—transpiration, perspiration, urination
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Run off: water on the surface
that usually occurs when the land is saturated or melting occurs Ground water: water under the ground that occurs when rain infiltrates the soil
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Nitrogen Cycle
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Nitrogen Cycle All living organisms need nitrogen to make proteins (for growth and repair) The atmosphere is 78% nitrogen gas (N2) but plants and animals cannot use N2 in this form
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Nitrogen must be “fixed” to oxygen in order for plants to absorb it and to benefit an ecosystem
. Nitrification: the capture and conversion of nitrogen into a form that is useable by plants
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How is Nitrogen Fixed into a Usable Form?
Nitrogen is “fixed” in the following ways: 5-10% of N2 is “fixed” by lightning Lightning splits bonds between N2 and N bonds with O2 90% of N2 is “fixed” by bacteria found in the roots of legumes (pea, soybean, peanut plants)
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Man “fixes” nitrogen in fertilizer and introduces it to the ecosystem
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Plants use these nitrogen compounds (specifically nitrates NO3) to make protein
Animals eat plants and use the plants’ protein to make their own protein Animal passes waste or dies and releases nitrogen compounds into the soil
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Nitrogen compounds go back into the soil where bacteria break it back into N2 gas
Denitrification: the process of (different) bacteria breaking down nitrogen compounds (such as ammonia) back into N2 gas (no longer useable for plants)
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Carbon Cycle
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Carbon Cycle Carbon Dioxide gas (CO2) is in the atmosphere
Large reserves in oceans—dissolved in limestone deposits
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Plants take in CO2 during photosynthesis
6 CO2 + 6 H2O + (light) → C6H12O6 + 6 O2 6 carbon dioxide + 6 molecules of water produce one molecule of sugar + 6 molecules of oxygen
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Animals take in O2 and glucose and give off CO2 and H2O
CO2 goes back into the atmosphere Cellular respiration
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Plant dies and is buried for millions of years
Fossil fuels form Man extracts and burns fossil fuels releasing CO2 into the atmosphere
Standard II-1, part 3- Biogeochemical Processes
Section 3: Cycling of Matter
Biogeochemical Cycles
BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES, THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT And Renewable vs Nonrenewable Resources.
Cycles of Matter.
Nutrient Cycles -Academic Water Cycle (pg.) 1. The movement of water between the oceans, atmosphere, land and living things is the water cycle. 2. Evaporation.
Cycles Matter can cycle through the biosphere because biological systems do not use up matter, they transform it. Matter is Recycled within and between.
Ecosystems Section 3 Ecology 4.3 Notes. Ecosystems Section 3 Objectives Describe each of the biogeochemical cycles.
10/8/14 Objective: What are the biogeochemical cycles? Do Now:
Biogeochemical Cycles. Need to consider interactions between abiotic (non living) and biotic (living) factors. Also consider energy flow and chemical.
Biochemical Cycles- closed circles or cycles of materials from nonliving to living organisms and back to nonliving. Examples : Water, carbon, nitrogen.
Biogeochemical Cycles
Biogeochemical Cycles. Transpiration is the release of water from plants. precipitation condensation transpiration evaporation water storage in ocean.
Biogeochemical Cycles
Ecology Unit Learning Goal #2: Explain relationships between matter cycles and organisms.
1.2 Nutrient Cycles and Energy Flow (Part 1) pp
Nutrient Cycles WATER CARBON NITROGEN.
Biogeochemical Cycles
Ecology 4.3 Notes.
Biogeochemical (Nutrient) Cycles
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