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E. Natural Biochemical Cycles Carbon Cycle The carbon cycle is one of the most important cycles of Earth’s atmosphere. It allows plants to intake nutrients from respiration, and produce oxygen and nutrients for consumers. CO2 is known for having a negative impact on the environment, but it is a major necessity for our climate. The problem is too much CO2. When there is too much for the atmosphere to hold, plants cannot absorb it all and it stays in the atmosphere. Outputs of CO2 are mainly from respiration (plants, animals, humans) and industry (burning of fossil fuels). Too much CO2 can increase global temperature (Earth’s climate), but not enough can drastically cool the Earth. In this cycle Nitrogen is converted into its other chemical forms by biological and atmospheric processes. These include Nitrogen fixation (N2 is converted by bacteria in soil to NH3), Ammonification (dead organisms and proteins release NH3 back into the atmosphere), Nitrification (bacteria converts ammonia in the soil to NO2 or NO3), Denitrification (Bacteria respirates NO3 in soil to output N2 into the atmosphere), and Assimilation (Plants absorb NH3 and NO3 from the soil, and then Ammonia and proteins can be made for other organisms to absorb by eating the plant or its nodules). The nitrogen cycle plays a large part in decomposition and primary production, because decomposers absorb nitrogen and release it and nitrogen is found in molecules necessary for photosynthesis. Nitrogen is also found in all Amino Acids, which build up proteins and are essential to life. Phosphorus is significant to energy consumption of living organisms. Plants absorb phosphorus from water and soil, which is passed through trophic levels from consumption. When organisms die, the phosphorus they consume is released into the soil and is either absorbed by plants or stored in rocks & soil. Phosphorus is absorbed by the rocks & soil from run-off into lakes or streams. It stays absorbed for millions of years. Sulfur Cycle Sulfur is another key contributor to proteins, vitamins, and hormones. Sulfur can either mineralize or oxidize. Sulfur mineralizes, or reduces to hydrogen sulfide (H2S), and it oxidizes to sulfate (SO4). Sulfate can be reduced to hydrogen sulfide by anaerobic respiration (no use of oxygen). Organic sulfur is a main component to proteins. Most of it is found in sedimentary rocks and minerals (Earth’s Crust). Sulfur cycles mainly through decomposition and assimilation. Plants absorb sulfate through their roots to produce organic sulfur compounds that travel through trophic levels. It is released by the decomposition of dead organisms, fossil fuel combustion, and volcanic eruptions as H2S. When H2S is converted into SO2, sulfuric acid (H2SO4; weak acid) is formed from the reaction of SO2 and H2O (an acid carried by rainfall, like HNO3). Water Cycle The Water cycle is the most key cycle of all the biological cycles. It even plays parts in other cycles like the phosphorus cycle (phosphorus being transported to lakes and streams as run-off). Water is evaporated into its gas phase, and then condensed in clouds. After it condenses it is precipitated to Earth’s Surface and infiltrated. It is cycled by being carried back to large water sources from ground water discharge and runoff, and then evaporated. Also, water is stored as groundwater, and in ice and snow. Two other ways water gets back into the atmosphere are from sublimation (frozen water to gaseous water vapor) and Evapotranspiration (release of water vapor from plants and soil). Law of Conservation of Matter This theory proves that matter can neither be created nor destroyed. One thing matter can do is rearrange or be changed chemically. The Law of Conservation shows that when a reaction occurs, the mass of the products equals the reactants. In a closed system the matter will always be present no matter what reaction occurs; it is just changed. Here is an example of a reaction to show the Law of Conservation of Matter: The burning of Calcium Carbonate: This shows how the mass of the products is equal to the mass of the reactant, even though the reactant was chemically decomposed to form two compounds. Sources Diagrams and information on the phosphorus and sulfur cycles The Carbon Cycle: "SAS Carbon • Cycle." SASindex. Web. 05 May 2010. <http://www.starsandseas.com/SAS%20Ecology/SAS%20chemcycles/cycle_carbon.htm>. The Nitrogen Cycle: "ElectroMagnetic • Current." LVL39 Forum ‐ Investigating Paranormal, UFO, Alien and Above Top Secret UFO Conspiracy. Web. 05 May 2010. <http://www.lvl39.com/forums/amateur‐articles/1511‐ electromagnetic‐current.html>. • The Phosphorus Cycle: "SAS Phosphorus Cycle." SASindex. Web. 05 May 2010. <http://www.starsandseas.com/SAS%20Ecology/SAS%20chemcycles/cycle_phosphorus.htm>. • The Sulfur Cycle: "Bacteria and Archaea and the Cycles of Elements in the Environment." Online Textbook of Bacteriology. Web. 05 May 2010. <http://www.textbookofbacteriology.net/environment_4.html>. • The Water Cycle: Homer L. Dodge Department of Physics and Astronomy ‐ Univ. Okla. Web. 05 May 2010. <http://www.nhn.ou.edu/~jeffery/course/c_energy/energyl/lec004.html>. Information on the Law of conservation of mass and the Carbon, Nitrogen, and Water cycles was from my knowledge and notes.