Title: THE PHOSPHORUS CYCLE
1THE PHOSPHORUS CYCLE
2WHAT IS THE PHOSPHORUS CYCLE?
- The phosphorus cycle, is the circulation of
phosphorous among the rocks, soils, water, and
plants and animals of the earth. Human beings and
all other organisms must have phosphorus to
live. In nature, most phosphorus occurs in
phosphate rock, which contains phosphate ions
combined with calcium, magnesium, chlorine, and
fluorine.
3- It cannot be found in air in the gaseous . This
is because phosphorous is usually liquid at
normal temperatures pressures. - This cycle is the slowest of the matter cycles.
- Phosphorus is most commonly found in rock
formations and ocean sediments as phosphate
salts. Phosphates are also limiting factors for
plant-growth in marine ecosystems, because they
are not very water-soluble.
4The process of the Phosphorous cycle
- ?The cycle basically starts out in the earths
soil. The soil contains phosphate and when
something grows out of the soil it should have
phosphate as well. - ?When the plants grow they are consumed by
herbivore and omnivore animals - ?The animals waste or the animals body when it
dies becomes detritus.
- ?Detritus is non-living organic material. When
the detritus goes deep into the soil,
detritivores in the soil decompose and become the
soils phosphate and the cycle repeats.
5- Another example of the phosphorus cycle is when
rocks are created. - The phosphate in the soil moves on and transfers
its phosphate to the rocks underwater. When the
uplifting of the rocks occurs it takes the
phosphate along with it. After that the
weathering of rocks occur and the rocks begin to
break down into the soil and the phosphate in the
rocks ends up in the soil again and the cycle
repeats.
6Uplifting of rocks
Phosphates in organic compounds
Weathering of rock
Phosphates in rock
Animals
Plants
Runoff
Detritus
Phosphates in soil (inorganic)
Phosphates in solution
Decomposition
Detritivores in soil
Precipitated (solid) phosphates
Rock
7 ? All these examples of phosphates are inorganic
(white boxes). However, the Phosphorus Cycle is
also organic (yellow boxes). ?Not all
phosphates in the runoff make it to the water
others sink into the soil. These inorganic
phosphates are transformed into organic ones by
plants, which are in turn eaten by animals. ?
The dead animals, retain their internal
phosphorus stores and detritivores (scavengers
which feed on dead plants and animals or their
waste) change the organic phosphates back to
inorganic ones.
8HOW DO HUMANS INTERFERE WITH THE PHOSPHORUS CYCLE?
- Cutting and burning of tropical rain forests
affects the phosphorus cycle. As the forest is
cut and/or burned, nutrients originally stored in
plants and rocks are quickly washed away by heavy
rains, causing the land to become unproductive. -
9- ? Agricultural runoff provides much of the
phosphate found in waterways. Crops often cannot
absorb all of the fertilizer in the soils,
causing excess fertilizer runoff and increasing
phosphate levels in rivers and other bodies of
water. The phosphate in the water is eventually
precipitated as sediments at the bottom of the
body of water. In certain lakes and ponds this
may be re-dissolved and recycled as a problem
nutrient.
- Animal wastes or manure may also be applied to
the land as fertilizer. If misapplied on frozen
ground during the winter, much of it may lost as
run-off during the spring thaw. In certain area
very large feed lots of animals, may result in
excessive run-off of phosphate and nitrate into
streams.
CRAP
10- Another human cause of artificial eutrophication
is run-off from mines. Mining in areas where rock
is rich in phosphorus minerals can create dust
that is blown by wind into nearby water systems.
- A major problem with the use of phosphorus in
fertilizers is the process of artificial
eutrophication. Eutrophication is a large
increase in the primary productivity of a lake.
Eutrophication can be harmful to the natural
balance of a lake and result in massive death of
fish and other animals as dissolved oxygen levels
are depleted from the water.
11 Thank you for your attention we hope
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