Transcript File
Chapter 3: Earth’s
Environmental
Systems
Biogeochemical Cycles
Law of Conservation of
Mass
Matter can not be created or destroyed
It just changes form….
Water cycle…changes state
Biogeochemical cycles….changes into
different compounds through different types
of reactions
Nutrients
Matter that organisms require for their life
processes.
Macronutrients vs. Micronutrients
Nutrients required in
Large amounts like
Carbon, Oxygen,
Nitrogen and Phosphorus
Nutrients required in
Small amounts like
Potassium, Calcium,
Iron, etc.
Food chains/Food webs
All of the substances that make up an
organism is made of carbon…where
does it come from?
Depends on what type of organism you
are….
Ten Percent Rule
Producer vs. Consumer
Primary producers produce their own food
via photosynthesis
Plants, algae, phytoplankton (phyto- = plant)
Consumers are organisms that must eat
(consume) other organisms (plant or animal) to
obtain nutrients
Mostly animals
Decomposers are organisms that break
down wastes and dead organisms
Bacteria and fungi
Carbon Cycle
Needed for energy
Also includes oxygen
Carbon is found in most of the compounds on
earth…plastic, gasoline, carbohydrates, proteins, lipids,
nucleic acids, etc….
A couple things to know in order to understand this
cycle….
Food chains/Food webs
Producers, Consumers, and Decomposers
Photosynthesis
Respiration
Combustion
Decomposition
Fossil Fuels
Carbon Sinks vs. Carbon sources
Photosynthesis
Producers use solar energy to convert
CO2 from the air into a usable form of
carbon (glucose) that organisms can use
for energy
(glucose)
Cellular respiration
Process by which ALL organisms use
oxygen to release the chemical energy of
sugars (glucose)
Decomposition
All organisms die…where does their
carbon go?
To the soil and eventually into rock
(limestone) or as fossil fuels (coal or
petroleum)
Fossil Fuels and
Combustion
Fossil fuels are used by humans for
energy through a process called
combustion
This releases CO2 back into the
atmosphere
Carbon Sinks vs.
Carbon Sources
Sinks: Holds Carbons
Limestone and other sedimentary rock
Ocean
Plants: Land and Marine (phytoplankton/algae)
Permafrost: permanently frozen land
Sources: Releases Carbon back to
atmosphere
Combustion: transportation, industry, etc.
Respiration
Volcanoes
Phosphorus Cycle
Needed to
make
DNA and RNA
Only involves the lithosphere (land)
No atmospheric form
Think…
Fertilizer
Food chains
Runoff
Eutrophication
Phosphorus is bound up in
rocks
Low amounts
Limiting factor of plant growth
Not needed as much as nitrogen…hangs
out in water ways
Reason why it is main culprit of
eutrophication
Eutrophication
The effect is an overgrowth of producers
(algae)
Caused by runoff from fertilizer (high in
nitrogen and phosphorus) as well as
wastewater (phosphorus is found in
detergents)
Can lead to hypoxia (low oxygen levels)
from bacteria decomposing all the dead
producers
Nitrogen Cycle
Needed for proteins
Most abundant gas in atmosphere
Atmospheric nitrogen is unusable
Relies on bacteria to make it usable
Think…
Fertilizer
Legumes
Food chains
Bacteria: nitrogen fixation
Nitrification vs. Denitrofication
Lightning
Eutrophication
Nitrogen “fixing”
Nitrogen fixation: Conversion of nitrogen gas
(N2) to ammonia (usable by plants)
Lightning
Nitrogen-fixing bacteria (found naturally in soil or in
root nodules of legumes)
Nitrification: bacteria convert ammonia (NH3)
into nitrites (NO2) then into nitrates (NO3)
Denitrification: denitrifying bacteria convert
nitrates back into nitrogen gas (N2)
Secondary Nutrients
Potassium
Comes from weathered mineral salts
Needed for nerve function
Calcium
Needed for plant growth and shell formation
Iron
Needed for photosynthesis and transporting
oxygen in blood