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Cycling of Matter 4.3

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... develop, reproduce, respond, maintain homeostasis, etc. Sources ... CYCLE The continual movement of H20 from the Earth s surface and oceans to the atmosphere ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cycling of Matter 4.3


1
Cycling of Matter 4.3biogeochemical
cycles
  1. WATER
  2. CARBON-OXYGEN
  3. NITROGEN
  4. PHOSPHORUS

2
WATER (H20) CYCLE
  • The continual movement of H20 from the Earths
    surface and oceans to the atmosphere and back to
    the surface and oceans again.
  • Powered by the sun (solar energy) which causes
    evaporation transpiration (water loss from
    plants).
  • Cells 70-90 waterEarth 75 water
  • water is a KEY factor in terrestrial
    ecosystems!!

3
DRAW IT!! ? PosterBLUE ARROWS
  • precipitation (forms rain, snow, sleet, hail,
    fog)
  • transpiration (aka evapotranspiration)
  • evaporation
  • runoff
  • water vapor
  • percolation (water into soil)
  • ground water (water in soil)

4
CARBON (C) CYCLE
  • CO2 to plants ? photosynthesis (requires sunlight
    and H20 too!) ? carbohydrates
  • carbohydrates? consumers (AND PLANTS!) ?
    respiration
  • respiration?back to CO2 and biomass.

5
  • PHOTOSYNTHESIS stores solar energy in the form of
    C-C bonds in organic compounds (glucose!).
  • RESPIRATION releases chemical bond energy and
    makes it available (usable) to cellscells need
    energy to grow, develop, reproduce, respond,
    maintain homeostasis, etc.
  • Sources all organisms (including decomposers),
    natural burning, power plant / factory / vehicle
    emissions.

6
DRAW IT!! ?FoldNotesBLACK ARROWS
  • Photosynthesis
  • Cellular respiration (CR)
  • Decomposition (CR) bacteria fungi in soil
  • Combustion
  • Food chain (consumerspart of CR)
  • CO2 , O2, H20, Sun

7
NITROGEN (N) CYCLE
  • Air contains 78 N2 gas
  • N2 gas must be converted into other compounds
    (nitrates) before it can be used by plants called
    nitrogen fixation (done by bacteria) ? then by
    other living things.
  • Plants use the nitrogen compounds they absorb
    through their roots (a process called
    assimilation) to make amino acids, proteins, and
    other important substances. Animals get the
    nitrogen they need by consuming plants or
    organisms that consume plants.

8
Others!
  • Decomposers play an important role by breaking
    down N-containing animal wastes and the remains
    of dead organisms ? similar process to
    nitrification.
  • Another type of bacteria converts some of the
    ammonia and nitrates into free N2 gas ? back into
    atmospherethis is called denitrification.

9
DRAW IT!! ?FoldNotesGREEN ARROWS
  • Ammonia
  • N2 (nitrogen gas), H20
  • Nitrogen fixation
  • Denitrification
  • Nitrogen-fixing bacteria
  • Nitrates
  • Assimilation (occurs through plant roots)
  • Denitrifying bacteria
  • Decomposers
  • Death/waste

10
PHOSPHORUS (P) CYCLE
  • P is a component of ATP (energy storing compound
    used by cells)
  • and is a component of DNA (genetic code)
  • Found in soil and rock as calcium phosphate which
    dissolves in H20 to form phosphate ? plants
    absorb through their roots ? animals eat plants
    (P is transferred) ? animals and plants die ?
    phosphorus is returned to soil.

11
http//www.marietta.edu/biol/102/ecosystem.htmlt
op
12
DRAW IT!! ?
  • FoldNotesRED ARROWS
  • Key words on previous slide.
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