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Chapter 3: The Biosphere Warm Up • 1. On average, what percentage of the energy in an ecosystem is transferred from one trophic level to the next? • 2. Where does the rest of the energy go? • 3. How does energy flow through an ecosystem? 3.4 Cycles of Matter • Matter is recycled within and between ecosystems. • Biogeochemical cycles • Matter is transformed – never created or destroyed destroyed! Biogeochemical Cycles • Matter is passed from one organism to another and to one part of the biosphere to another. • Water, Carbon, Nitrogen, and Phosphorous The Water Cycle Nutrient Cycles • Nutrients pass through organisms and the environment through biogeochemical cycles! • 1. Carbon cycle • 2. Nitrogen Cycle • 3. Phosphorus cycle The Carbon Cycle • Carbon = large component of all organic compounds! • Forms carbon dioxide (important in atmosphere and oceans) • Oil, natural gas, coal (fossil fuels) The Carbon Cycle The Nitrogen Cycle • Nitrogen gas makes up 78% of earth’s atmosphere • Organisms need nitrogen to make amino acids and nucleic acids • Nitrogen fixation: Bacteria convert nitrogen gas into ammonia • Denitrification: Bacteria obtain energy by converting nitrates into nitrogen gas (released to atmosphere) Phosphorus Cycle • Phosphorus forms a part of DNA and RNA • Not abundant in atmosphere • Mostly on land in the form of rock and soil, or as dissolved phosphate in oceans • Phosphate released as rocks and sediments wear down The Phosphorus Cycle Nutrient Limitation • Nutrients whose supply limits productivity is called the limiting nutrient All nutrient cycles work together! If any nutrient is in short supply, the wheel “sticks” • Growth of crop plants limited by nutrients—so farmers use fertilizers • Nitrogen is the limiting nutrient in the ocean, phosphorus is the limiting nutrient in lakes and freshwater streams