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Cycles of Life Science 10 Unit 1: Sustainability of Ecosystems G.Burgess Sept.2006. Water Cycle • All fresh water begins as precipitation • Rain, sleet, snow, hail, mist, fog • ONLY 3% of the world’s water is fresh water • fresh water begins as rain falling on mountain tops creating run-off and forms streams, rivers. • It temporarily collects in ponds and lakes, but will ultimately be collected by the oceans and seas. • All life on our planet depends on water and much of it depends on the amounts of available fresh water. Water Cycle • Accumulation: collecting of water in form of ice/snow in glacial sheets and as liquid in ponds, lakes, seas, and oceans. • Condensation: changing of water vapor into liquid • Evaporation: changing of liquid water into vapor • Precipitation: falling of water as solid or liquid from atmosphere • Runoff: movement of water from site of precipitation to ocean • Transpiration: water vapor given off by living organisms. ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/watercycle.html, accessed Sept.19, 2006. Carbon Cycle • Carbon is the base element of all living things on planet Earth. • All living organism requires energy. • Living organisms (all producers and consumers) require sugar (glucose) to produce energy. • Producers (green plants) create the sugar when the sun is out. • The world’s first mass extinction (long before the dinosaurs) is said to have happened because the bacteria on our planet produced large quantities of oxygen as a waste product and made the atmosphere toxic. Carbon Cycle • Living organisms convert sugar into useable energy by the process of cellular respiration. • Cellular respiration requires oxygen from the atmosphere to release the energy by ‘burning’ the sugar. • ‘Burning’ of sugar releases water vapor and CO2 into the atmosphere • Producers take the CO2, from the atmosphere, and water, from the soil and atmosphere, to create sugar by the process of photosynthesis Carbon Cycle C6H12O6 Photosynthesis CO2 + H2O Cellular Respiration **The carbon cycle occurs on land and in the water. Wherever there is life. http://fig.cox.miami.edu/Faculty/Dana/carboncycle.gif, accessed Sept.19, 2006. Nitrogen Cycle • Agriculturalists use fertilizers to ensure that their crops have enough nitrogen, and other elements. • All living things have proteins (DNA is a type of protein) • Proteins, unlike other organic molecules, contain nitrogen. • Plants take in the nitrogen from the soil to create proteins. • Consumers eating the plants change the plant proteins in to proteins they can use. • These nitrogen compounds are not only found in soil but also in the atmosphere and in the water. Nitrogen Cycle • producers package nitrogen from the soil and air by nitrogen fixation. They change the nitrogen gas to useable chemical forms. • Consumers must eat the plants or other consumers to obtain the nitrogen. • as consumers die or leave organic waste material, decomposers (bacteria and fungi) release the nitrogen into the soil as ammonia (NH4) or as nitrate (NO3) • Denitrifying bacteria release the nitrogen from the nitrate as nitrogen gas • The gas is then picked up by the producers • **Nitrogen released in water will be absorbed by producers in the water Nitrogen Cycle http://www.epa.gov/maia/images/nitro.jpg, accessed Sept.19,2006. Nitrogen Cycle • Nitrification: process of converting ammonia into nitrate. – Performed by nitrifying bacteria • Denitrification: process of converting nitrate into nitrogen gas – Performed by denitrifying bacteria Human impacts on Nitrogen Cycle • Artificial fertilizers: the production of fertilizer increased the amount of nitrogen being fixed by more than half that which was done naturally. This increased the amount of nitrogen available in the natural environment. • Burning of fossil fuels increases the amount of nitrogen in the atmosphere • Excess nitrogen = nitrogen overload Impacts of Nitrogen in Nature • Atmosphere: acid rain (nitric acid) • Fresh water ecosystem: eutrophication, when the build up of nutrients causes the population of producers to increase to a point that harms the natural population balance of the ecosystem Impacts of Nitrogen in Nature • Marine Ecosystem: all the nitrogen flowing into rivers and streams ends up in the oceans. • An increase nitrogen in the oceans may cause algal bloom (an explosion in the algae population) – Algae will grow in layers covering parts of the lake and not allow oxygen to enter the water. – Bacteria decomposing the algae use up the oxygen and release carbon dioxide. – Organisms normally requiring oxygen will die of carbon dioxide poisoning Resources • Atmospheric Composition, Explores! http://www.met.fsu.edu/explores/atmcomp.h tml, accessed Sept.19, 2006 • Science Power 10, McGraw-Hill Ryerson, 2001.