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BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLE 2

Nitrogen is essential to living things for the production of proteins and DNA which are used to pass on the hereditary information from parent to

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BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLE 2

NITROGEN CYCLE

NITROGEN

Nitrogen is essential to living things for the production of proteins and DNA which are used to pass on the hereditary information from parent to offspring.

Even though the atmosphere is about 78% nitrogen gas, plants and animals are unable to use nitrogen gas directly as a source of nitrogen to make organic nitrogen compounds.

The nitrogen cycle can occur in both terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems.

2.NITRIFICATION It is a bacterial process in which

ammonium (NH4) ions are converted into nitrate ions. They are first changed into nitrites (NO2-)

by bacteria, and then converted to Nitrates (NO3-) by a different group of bacteria.

3: ASSIMILATION: THE MAKING OF PROTEINS FOR CONSUMER USE

Assimilation is the process by which plants use the nitrate ions (NO3-) to make amino acids, proteins, and DNA.

Only plants and bacteria can carry out the process, all other living organisms receive their nitrogen compounds from the food they eat.

4. AMMONIFICATION Consumers generally produce wastes

throughout their lives. When consumers die their body contain nitrogen compounds such as protein and DNA.

Ammonification is when bacteria and some fungi break down these nitrogen compounds to make ammonia. The ammonia immediately dissolves in soil water to form ammonium ions.(NH4+)

5.DENITRIFICATION During this step, nitrites are changes to

Nitrogen gas (N2) which returns to the atmosphere.

It is basically the reverse of nitrogen fixation and nitrification.

Done by bacteria!

5.DENITRIFICATION During this step, nitrites are changes to

Nitrogen gas (N2) which returns to the atmosphere.

It is basically the reverse of nitrogen fixation and nitrification.

Done by bacteria!

HUMAN IMPACT

As a result of human activities most ecosystems have been either totally destroyed or have components such as tropic structure, energy flow and chemical cycling disrupted.

Most effects are local or regional such as agriculture effects on nutrient cycling and introduction of toxic compounds in food chain.

PHOSPHORUS CYCLE

PHOSPHORUS CYCLE

PHOSPHORUS CYCLE Phosphate is important for cell membranes, it helps

release energy that makes up DNA and calcium in bones.

Phosphate in rocks and fossils will weather (break down into tiny pieces). The inorganic phosphate dissolves in soil and

rivers. Plants absorb phosphates and consumers

receive phosphate from eating plants. Organic phosphate returns to the soil when

decomposition occurs. Bones, teeth and waste, as well as river runoffs

go to the ocean. Here the Phosphate is store until there is a

geological uplift.

OXYGEN CYCLE

NUTRIENT CYCLES Inorganic nutrients

(Carbon, Oxygen, Nitrogen) are recycled continually through ecosystems.

Plants and animals build structures from nutrients and inorganic material.

ENERGY FLOW VS. NUTRIENT CYCLING Energy flows through ecosystems: it

enters the ecosystem via sunlight, is stored temporarily in complex molecules, and ultimately leaves in the form of heat.

Nutrients cycle within ecosystems: they are atoms that stay within the ecosystem and are found at different times in different pasrts of the system.

NUTRIENT CYCLES Nutrients are recycled in a living

system. The key nutrients are carbon, hydrogen

Oxygen, Nitrogen and Phosphorus. These constitute 95% of all living matter

HYDROGEN AND OXYGEN (WATER) CYCLE

OXYGEN CYCLE

OXYGEN The Earth's atmosphere contains

about 21% oxygen As you know from the previous lesson, oxygen gas (O2)

is recycled as part of the carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen cycles.

Oxygen gas is cycled between the atmosphere and the living organisms of both aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems.

Oxygen gas from the atmosphere is absorbed by the water in aquatic ecosystems.

Oxygen is also produced as a byproduct of the photosynthetic organisms that live in the aquatic ecosystems.

Heterotrophs (consumers) living in aquatic ecosystems require oxygen for cellular respiration but they receive their oxygen from the dissolved oxygen in the water

OXYGEN During winter, ponds and

lakes may freeze.there is little or no light and

photosynthesis ceases. As a result, aquatic algae and plants

can no longer produce oxygen. Therefore it is possible that all fish within the lake or pond will die off. oxygen may be a limiting factor in

aquatic ecosystems However Oxygen is rarely, if ever, a

limiting factor in terrestrial ecosystems.