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Cycles of Matter 3-3 • Energy and matter move through the biosphere very differently • Energy has a 1 way flow • Matter can be recycled within & between ecosystems • Elements, chemical compounds, & other forms of matter are passed from 1 organism to another, & from 1 part of the biosphere to another, through the biogeochemical cycles • Biogeochemical cycles connect biological, geological, chemical aspects of the biosphere Water Cycle • Water moves between land, atmosphere, and the oceans • The water cycle consists of evaporation & transpiration, condensation, & then precipitation • Evaporation – water enters atmosphere from ocean, lakes, & puddles • Transpiration – water enters atmosphere from plant leaves • Condensation – water vapor cools and forms clouds, that hold moisture • Precipitation – moisture droplets in clouds become too heavy, and fall back to Earth • Water on land runs along surface until it meets a body of water – runoff • Water also enters soil to replenish ground water levels - seepage Nutrient Cycles • Nutrients – all chemical substances an organism need to survive – Chemical building blocks • Plants get nutrients from environment • Like water, nutrients are passed between organisms and environment Carbon Cycle • Key ingredient in living tissues • Found in skeletons & rocks as CaCO3 • Found as CO2 in atmosphere – Taken in by plants during photosynthesis, given off by plants and animals • 4 main types of processes that move carbon through its cycle 1) Biological processes – photosynthesis, respiration, decomposition 1) Take up & release carbon 2) Geochemical – erosion & volcanic activity 1) Release CO2 to atmosphere &oceans 3) Mixed biogeochemical processes – burial & decomposition of dead organisms & conversion under pressure into coal & petroleum 1) Stores carbon 4)Human activities – mining, cutting & burning trees, burning fossil fuels 1) release CO2 Nitrogen Cycle • All organisms require nitrogen to make amino acids (proteins) • Nitrogen gas makes up 78% of the atmosphere • Ammonia (NH3), nitrates (NO3-), & nitrites (NO2-) are found in animal wastes & dead/decaying organic matter • Nitrogen exists in oceans & other large bodies of water • Humans add nitrogen to the biosphere (nitrates) when they use fertilizer Nitrogen in the Biosphere • Nitrogen fixing bacteria convert N2 gas to ammonia (NH3) • The bacteria live in soil & on roots of plants called legumes • This conversion happens in a process called nitrogen fixation • Other bacteria in soil convert ammonia to nitrates & nitrites • Once NO3- and NO2- are available, producers use them to make proteins • Consumers eat producers and reuse N2 to make their own protein • When organisms die, decomposers return nitrogen to the soil as ammonia • Other soil bacteria convert nitrates into nitrogen gas – Known as denitrification – Releases nitrogen into the atmosphere again Phosphorus Cycle • Phosphorus is important to organisms because it forms part of DNA & RNA • Rare in the biosphere • Does not enter atmosphere • Found on land in rocks and soil minerals, and in ocean sediments • Exists as inorganic phosphate • As rocks and sediments wear down, phosphate is released • Washed into rivers from land - used by marine organisms • On land, phosphorus cycles between organisms and soil • Producers uptake phosphate from soil or water • Phosphate is then bound to organic compounds • Compounds move to consumers & then rest of ecosystem Nutrient Limitation • Primary productivity of an ecosystem is the rate at which organic matter is created by producers • Controlled by nutrient availability • If important nutrient is in short supply – limiting nutrient • Limiting nutrient – single substance that limits an ecosystem’s productivity • Reasons for fertilizer – Contain N:P:K -> helps plants grow larger & more quickly • Open oceans are considered nutrient poor – Contain only 1/10,000 amount of N2 as soils – Nitrogen is limiting agent in salt water – Sometimes it can be silica or iron • In freshwater – phosphorus is limiting nutrient • When an ecosystem receives a large amount of limiting nutrient it results in an algal bloom • Algal bloom – increase in algae & other producers • Why? – more nutrients available – Producers can grow & reproduce more quickly – Without consumers, algae can cover surface of water • When all nutrients are used up, algae die – Fed on by bacteria – Cause water to become stinky