Carbon Cycle
Download
Report
Transcript Carbon Cycle
Chapter 4-3: Cycling of Matter
What is the water cycle?
Why are plants and animals important for
carbon and oxygen in an ecosystem?
Why must nitrogen cycle through an
ecosystem?
Why must phosphorus cycle through an
ecosystem?
Carbon Cycle
• Carbon is an essential component of proteins,
carbohydrates and fats
• C is cycled between the atmosphere, land, water
and organisms – continuously
• Finite amount of carbon – must be reused
• Producers obtain CO2 and turn it into organic
compounds using photosynthesis
Fuel
• Producers (plants) and consumers use
carbohydrates as fuel and release CO2
• Carbohydrates are used for
– 1. provide fuel (energy),
– 2. biomass (growth,cells,materials) and
– 3. waste (chemical and heat).
.
Short term Carbon cycle
• Short term cycle
1. CO2 in air/water
2. into plants;
3. photosynthesis4. Makes carbohydrates
5. consumed
6. respiration (back to CO2 )
7. and biomass
8. food web
Long term Carbon cycle
• Long term cycle
carbonates are added
to the soil and lakes
and fossil fuels can be
created with pressure
over geologic time
Other impacts
• Natural burning (forest fires) release CO2
into atmosphere
• Power plant, factory and vehicle emissions
also release CO2 into atmosphere.
• Cars = 1/3 of CO2 emissions (overall total
6 billion metric tons)
Fossil Fuels
• Fossil fuels are made from fossilized trees
and animals and shells…
• Hard to make/ remake when used up –
because
• Not a short term situation…. Don’t let the
pictures fool you into thinking that road-kill
becomes carbon in the soil….and its
instantly a fossil
CLIMATE CHANGE vs.
GLOBAL WARMING
• Climate change
means the there is an
overall, long term
change in the
climate….more
storms, more draught,
higher temps as well
as colder
temps….more
extremes in
conditions
• Global warming would
apply to areas that
are getting warmer.
• There is a lot more
going on.
– Some changes due to
activities of man
(pollution, industry,
deforestation….)
– Some changes may
be part of natural cycle
NITROGEN CYCLE
• All organisms need nitrogen to build amino
acids so they can make proteins.
• Cells are composed of proteins –
“Everything in the cell either is protein or is
run by a protein”
• N is also found in the nucleic acids (ATCG
and U) that make up DNA
Atmospheric Nitrogen
• 78% of atmospheric gases are nitrogen
• Atmospheric nitrogen (N2 gas) is not
usable by most organisms
• Organisms that can “fix” N2 into usable
formats are called Nitrogen fixing bacteria.
Nitrogen Fixation
• Nitrogen fixing bacteria are crucial to the
nitrogen cycle.
• Bacteria take N2 gas from the atmosphere and
turn it into usable molecules
• Nitrogen fixing bacteria have symbiotic
relationships with cells in the roots of legumes
(beans, peas & clover --soybeans & hay)
• N2 is turned into nitrates and nitrites (NO2 and
NO3)
• Nitrates and nitrites are released into the soil
Plants and nitrogen
• Plants that are not legumes get NO2 and NO3
from soil and use it to build proteins
• Decomposers break down waste, urine, dead
leaves, decaying organisms…. Into nitrogen
sources. (ammonia, NH3, NH4+ and some
gaseous N2)
• Lightening strikes can also convert N to usable
forms
Assimilation, Ammonification, etc.
• The process by which organisms get nitrogen
– Plants assimilate nitrogen from the soil into the
organic compounds they produce
– Animals (heterotrophs) assimilate nitrogen that is in
the amino acids and nucleic acids they eat from
producers into their own body mass.
• Ammonification is the process where nitrogen
containing compounds are broken down and
released from waste or decay (turned to NH4)
• Nitrification – converts ammonia to NO3 and NO2
• Denitrification – takes NO3 and NO2 and turns it
back into nitrogen gas in the atmosphere
Water Cycle
• Water has to move to and from the atmosphere,
land and bodies of water.
• Water is also found under the surface as ground
water.
• Water in lakes, streams, rivers, oceans,
wetlands and puddles is called surface water
• ¾ of the surface of the globe is covered in water
• Only % of it is fresh water (the rest of it is
marine=salty)….most of North America’s fresh
water is in the Great lakes region
Flow of Water
• Solid, liquid and gas (vapor) forms
• Land, ice, bodies of water, the atmosphere
and LIVING ORGANSIMS
• Physical factors like temperature,
temperature differences, wind and
pressure impact water flow.
Water cycle terms
• Precipitation any form of water that
falls from the clouds to the earth (rain, snow,
sleet and hail)
• Transpiration the process by which
plants release water vapor to the air from
their stomata
• Evaporation water changing state from
liquid to vapor (gas)
• Water vapor water in a gas form
More vocabulary
• Run-off water that falls on a solid
surface and then is absorbed into the soil
or moves toward a river/ body of water
• Percolation the process of water being
absorbed into the soil/becoming ground
water
• Ground water
Water Cycle
•
•
•
•
Water in the atmosphere (clouds)
Change in temp and/or pressure
Precipitates
Falls on
– Land and percolates into soil (not just in soil but also
springs and water table)
– Land and is run-off; goes toward body of water
– Water and stays
• Water evaporates from surface of lake/ocean
• Water back in atmosphere
•
•
•
•
Water is used by plants
Required for photosynthesis
6CO2 + 6H2O
C6H12O6 + 6O2
Water is a large component of all living
things – cytoplasm, blood, tissue, roots,
stems
• Water is needed for chemical reactions
like dehydration synthesis and hydrolysis