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Biogeochemical Cycles Chapter 2 Ecosystems provide vital services • All life on Earth (including humans) depends on healthy, functioning ecosystems • Ecosystem services: essential services provided by healthy, normally functioning ecosystems – When human activities damage ecosystems, we must devote resources to supply these services ourselves – Example: if we kill off insect predators, farmers must use synthetic pesticides that harm people and wildlife • One of the most important ecosystem services: – Nutrients cycle through the environment in intricate ways Ecological processes provide services Nutrients circulate through ecosystems • Nutrients move through the environment in complex ways – Matter is continually circulated in an ecosystem • Nutrient (biogeochemical) cycle: the movement of nutrients through ecosystems • Pool (reservoir): a location where nutrients remain for varying amounts of time (residence time) • Source: a reservoir releases more materials than it accepts • Sink: a reservoir that are accepts more than it releases • Flux: the rate at which materials move between reservoirs – Can change over time Humans affect nutrient cycling • Human activities affect nutrient cycling – Altering fluxes, residence times, and amounts of nutrients in reservoirs The water cycle affects all other cycles • Water is essential for biochemical reactions and is involved in nearly every environmental system and cycle • Hydrologic cycle: the flow of liquid, gaseous, and solid water through the environment – Less than 1% is available as fresh water • Evaporation: conversion of liquid to gaseous water • Transpiration: release of water vapor by plants • Precipitation: rain or snow returns water to Earth’s surface • Runoff: water flows into streams, lakes, rivers, oceans Transpiration Animation: Transpiration Right-click / Select “Play” Water is also stored underground • Infiltration: water soaks down through rock and soil to recharge aquifers • Aquifers: underground reservoirs of spongelike regions of rock and soil that hold … – Groundwater: water found underground beneath layers of soil • Water table: the uppermost level of groundwater held in an aquifer • Water in aquifers may be ancient (thousands of years old) The hydrologic cycle Human impacts on the hydrologic cycle • Humans have affected almost every flux, reservoir, and residence time in the water cycle • Damming rivers slows water movement and increases evaporation • Removal of vegetation increases runoff and erosion while decreasing infiltration and transpiration • Overdrawing surface and groundwater for agriculture, industry, and domestic uses lowers water tables • Emitting air pollutants that dissolve in water changes the nature of precipitation and decreases cleansing The Carbon Cycle • Carbon cycle: describes carbon’s route in the environment – Carbon forms essential biological molecules • Through photosynthesis, producers move carbon from the air and water to organisms – Respiration returns carbon to the air and water • Oceans are the second largest reservoir of carbon – Absorb carbon from the air, land, and organisms • Decomposition returns carbon to the sediment, the largest reservoir of carbon – Ultimately, it may be converted into fossil fuels The carbon cycle Humans affect the carbon cycle • Burning fossil fuels moves carbon from the ground to the air – Since mid-1700s, people have added over 275 billion tons of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere • Cutting forests and burning fields moves carbon from organisms to the air – Less carbon dioxide is removed by photosynthesis • Today’s atmospheric carbon dioxide reservoir is the largest in the past 800,000 years – The driving force behind climate change The Nitrogen Cycle • Nitrogen makes up 78% of the atmosphere • It is contained in proteins, DNA, and RNA – It is also essential for plant growth • Nitrogen cycle: describes the routes of nitrogen through the environment – Nitrogen gas is inert and cannot be used by organisms • It needs lightning, bacteria, or human intervention to become biologically active and available to organisms – Then it is a potent fertilizer Nitrogen must become biologically available • Nitrogen fixation: nitrogen-fixing soil bacteria or lightning “fixes” nitrogen gas into ammonium – Nitrogen-fixing bacteria live in legumes (e.g., soybeans) • Nitrification: bacteria then convert ammonium ions first into nitrite ions then into nitrate ions – Plants can take up these ions • Nitrite and nitrate also come from the air or fertilizers • Animals obtain nitrogen by eating plants or other animals • Denitrifying bacteria: convert nitrates in soil or water to gaseous nitrogen, releasing it back into the atmosphere The nitrogen cycle Humans greatly affect the nitrogen cycle • Historically, nitrogen fixation was a bottleneck: limited the flux of nitrogen from air into water-soluble forms • Industrial fixation fixes nitrogen on a massive scale – Overwhelming nature’s denitrification abilities • Excess nitrogen leads to hypoxia in coastal areas • Nitrogen-based fertilizers strip the soil of other nutrients – Reducing soil fertility • Burning forests and fossil fuels leads to acid precipitation, adds greenhouse gases, and creates photochemical smog The phosphorus cycle • Phosphorus cycle: describes the routes that phosphorus takes through the environment – No significant atmospheric component – Most phosphorus is in rocks • With naturally low environmental concentrations, phosphorus is a limiting factor for plant growth • Weathering releases phosphorus into water – Allowing it to be taken up by plants • Phosphorus is a key component of cell membranes, DNA, RNA, and other biochemical compounds The phosphorus cycle Humans affect the phosphorus cycle • Fertilizer from lawns and farmlands – Increases phosphorus in soil – Its runoff into water increases phytoplankton blooms and hypoxia • Wastewater containing detergents releases phosphorus to waterways Controlling nutrient pollution in waterways • Reduce fertilizer use in farms and lawns • Change timing of fertilizer applications to minimize runoff • Manage livestock manure applications to farmland • Plant vegetation “buffers” around streams to trap runoff • Restore wetlands and create artificial ones to filter runoff • Improve sewage-treatment technologies • Restore frequently flooded lands • Reduce fossil fuel combustion Conclusion • Life interacts with its abiotic environment in ecosystems through which energy flows and materials are recycled • Understanding biogeochemical cycles is crucial – Humans are changing the ways those cycles function • Understanding energy, energy flow, and chemistry increases our understanding of organisms – How environmental systems function • Thinking in terms of systems can teach us how to: – Avoid disrupting Earth’s processes and to mitigate any disruptions we cause