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Explore biogeochemical cycles and their influence on ecosystems, analyzing nutrient flow and human impacts. Learn about carbon, water, and nitrogen cycles and human activities' effects on them. Discover how changes in cycles can affect surrounding ecosystems.
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Biogeochemical Cycles Mrs. Stewart Biology
CLE 3210.3.4 Describe the events which occur during the major biogeochemical cycles.You will know you have mastered this standard when:You can predict how changes in a biogeochemical cycle can affect an ecosystem
Objectives: • Analyze the flow of nutrients in each biogeochemical cycle. • Evaluate the impact that humans have on the biogeochemical cycles.
Why do we recycle? • Think – Pair - Share
What sustains life on Earth? • Solar energy • The cycling of matter, energy & nutrients • Gravity
Two Secrets of Survival: Energy Flow and Matter Recycle • An ecosystem survives by a combination of energy flow and matter recycling.
MATTER CYCLING IN ECOSYSTEMS • Nutrient Cycles: Global Recycling • Global Cycles recycle nutrients through the earth’s air, land, water, and living organisms. • Nutrients - the elements and compounds that organisms need to live, grow, and reproduce.
Macromolecule Review • What element does every organic organism contain? • What are the 5 major elements that create all the macromolecules? Carbon Carbon Hydrogen Oxygen Nitrogen Phosphorous
Think – Pair – Share • What would happen to these elements if they were only capable of being used once? • Think about every time an organism is created and/or destroyed They would begin disappearing (dwindling in supply) – like fossil fuels
Biogeochemical Cycles • These are just illustrations or representations to show how substances move through air, water, soil, rock and living organisms.
Decomposition • Decomposers: • ultimately responsible for recycling of chemical nutrients • releasing the nutrients in detritus • This makes nutrients available again to the autotrophs in the ecosystem
Recycling • What nutrients get recycled? • Carbon Dioxide • Oxygen • Water • Carbon • Nitrogen • Phosphorous
Movement of Water • 4 important processes: • Evaporation – adds water as vapor to atmosphere (heat) • Bodies of water, soil, animal bodies, etc. • Transpiration – water evaporates from the leaves of plants • Condensation- Water vapor cools and “condenses” back into liquid droplets. • Precipitation– water released from the atmosphere (temperature, air pressure) • Rain, snow, sleet, hail or fog
Think-pair-share • What human activities effect the water cycle? • What do we do as humans that could have positive or negative effects on this cycle
Effects of Human Activities on Water Cycle • We alter the water cycle by: • Withdrawing large amounts of freshwater. • Clearing vegetation and eroding soils. • Polluting surface and underground water. • Contributing to climate change. • How do these changes affect the surrounding ecosystems?
Objectives: • Analyze the flow of nutrients in each biogeochemical cycle. • Evaluate the impact that humans have on the biogeochemical cycles.
Photosynthesis vs Cellular Respiration • Photosynthesis absorbs CO2 from the atmosphere/biosphere and releases O2 • Cellular respiration absorbs O2 from the atmosphere/biosphere and releases CO2
Carbon is found in 5 major places: • Living and dead organisms • Carbon Dioxide (CO2) in atmosphere • Organic matter in the soil • Fossil fuels and rock deposits • Oceans – dissolved CO2 and shells
Do these plants contain Carbon? What happens to the carbon now?
Think-pair-share • What human activities effect the Carbon-Oxygen cycle? • What do we do as humans that could have positive or negative effects on this cycle
Effects of Human Activities on Carbon Cycle • We alter the carbon cycle by adding excess CO2 to the atmosphere through: • Burning fossil fuels. • Clearing vegetation faster than it is replaced.
CFCs • Chloro-Fluoro-Carbons • Carbon, chlorine, fluorine • Are man made and used in: air-conditioning, refrigeration, blowing agents in foams, insulations and packing materials, propellants in aerosol cans, and as solvents. • When exposed to UV rays, chlorine is released and damages ozone layer
Bell work • Grab your Plickers card up front. • Come to me to get your test grade!
Objectives: • Analyze the flow of nutrients in each biogeochemical cycle. • Evaluate the impact that humans have on the biogeochemical cycles.
Nitrogen Uses: • Proteins • Enzymes, skin, muscles, etc. • Nucleic Acids • DNA • RNA
Forms of Nitrogen • Nitrogen is found in many forms in the atmosphere / ecosystem • N2 = nitrogen gas (79% of atmosphere) • N2O = nitrous oxide • NH3 = ammonia • NH4 = ammonium • NO3 = nitrate • NO2 = nitrite
Nitrogen Fixation • Converting N2 gas to nitrate (only usable form of nitrogen for most plants) • 2 types: • Natural = lightning, fires and bacteria • Human = fossil fuel combustion, fertilizer manufacturing
Nitrogen-fixing bacteria • bacteria that transform Nitrogen gas into a usable form (Nitrate) • Live in the soil • May live in the swellings on the roots of some plants (ex. Beans, peas, clover) • These plants provide sugars for the bacteria, and the bacteria provide usable nitrogen.
Recycling Nitrogen • Where is Nitrogen found? • Dead organisms (as proteins & nucleic acids) • Urine & dung • Decomposers: break down and release Nitrogen as NH3 (ammonia)
Nitrogen Processes • Ammonification – converting NH3 (ammonia) to NH4 (ammonium) • Nitrification – converting NH4 (ammonium) into NO2 (nitrite) or NO3 (nitrates) • Denitrification – anaerobic bacteria break down NO3 (nitrates) and release N2 (nitrogen gas) into the atmosphere
Nitrogen Sources: • Plants = Nitrates from the soil • Use to form proteins • Animals = eating plants/organisms and digesting the proteins and nucleic acids • Humans = have doubled the amount of fixed N2 in the atmosphere in the last 100 years. • HOW?
Too much of a good thing? • Too much nitrogen in aquatic ecosystems results in: • Eutrophication = excess nutrients stimulate plant growth (algal blooms); when these plants die, decomposers use up the available oxygen during decomposition.
Think-pair-share • What human activities effect the Nitrogen cycle? • What do we do as humans that could have positive or negative effects on this cycle • 2 minutes
Effects of Human Activities on the Nitrogen Cycle • We alter the nitrogen cycle by: • Adding gases that contribute to acid rain. • Adding nitrous oxide to the atmosphere through farming practices which can warm the atmosphere and deplete ozone. • Contaminating ground water from nitrate ions in inorganic fertilizers. • Releasing nitrogen into the troposphere through deforestation.
Effects of Human Activities on the Nitrogen Cycle • Human activities such as production of fertilizers now fix more nitrogen than all natural sources combined.
How does this affect the surrounding ecosystems? • Acid rain • creation of ground level ozone • groundwater contamination • eutrophication.
Objectives: Analyze the flow of nutrients in each biogeochemical cycle. Evaluate the impact that humans have on the biogeochemical cycles.
Overview • Movement of phosphorus from the environment, to organisms, and back to the environment • Slow process • Normally does not occur in atmosphere because phosphorus rarely occurs as a gas
Phosphorus Uses: • Essential material for animals • Form bones, teeth, molecules (DNA/RNA) Where do organisms get phosphorus? • Plants = absorb from soil and water • Animals = eating plants & other organisms