Transcript Ecology 2.7
Agriculture and Nutrient Cycles
Chapter 2.7
Agriculture and Nutrient Cycles
• The seeds, leaves, flowers and fruits
of plants all contain valuable
nutrients.
• As crops are harvested, the valuable
nitrogen and phosphorus are
removed and do not return to the
field.
• This diversion of nitrates and
phosphate from the local cycles
would soon deplete the soil unless
the farmer replaced the missing
nutrients.
What plants need!
• There are many other
elements/nutrients that plants need,
other than carbon. The most
important other nutrients are nitrogen
(N), phosphorus (P), and potassium
(K)
• As plants grow, they remove these
nutrients from the soil.
• FERTILIZERS are materials used to
restore nutrients and increase
production form land.
Fertilizer…
• However, adding too much fertilizer is
not always better. Extra, unused
fertilizer can end up in streams and
lakes.
Fertilizer and Ecosystems
• Read the first paragraph of “Fertilizer and
ecosystems” on page 70 ( 10 minutes )
• Question
• What can happen to organisms when too
much fertilizer is used?
• Answer:
• Nutrients allow algae to grow rapidly
( algal bloom)
• Algae die – Bacteria uses oxygen – oxygen
levels drop – fish / other animals die –
decomposer eat – bacteria population
grows – use more oxygen.
Class Questions ( 20 minutes)
• Answer questions Page 71
• #1,2,4,5
SOLUTIONS TO QUESTIONS
• Q1 – Why do the levels of nitrogen
and phosphorus in fields decline
when crops are harvested?
• Answer:
• Because some of these nutrients are
taken away in the crop
SOLUTIONS TO QUESTIONS
• Q2 – Explain how excess fertilizers
might affect decomposing
organisms.
• ANSWER:
• Excess fertilizer can seep into
waterways and cause the growth of
algae. When the algae die, the
population of decomposers increases
rapidly, causing oxygen depletion in
the water.
SOLUTIONS TO QUESTIONS
• Q4 – What dangers do high levels of
nitrates in the drinking water present
for infants?
• ANSWER:
• Their stomachs are not as acidic as
those of adults. Bacteria that convert
nitrates to nitrites in the intestines
can enter infants’ less acidic
stomachs. The nitrites can enter the
blood stream and bind to the
hemoglobin.
SOLUTIONS TO QUESTIONS
• Q5 – Explain why not planting a crop
and then ploughing in the fall might
help a framer restore nitrogen and
phosphorus levels in the soil.
• ANSWER:
• During the year nutrients, including
nitrogen and phosphorous,
accumulate in the plants that grow. If
the farmer ploughs these plants
under in the fall, the nutrients will
help enrich the soil. This is called
“green manure.”