46.3 Biogeochemical Cycles
46.3 Biogeochemical Cycles
- PCB concentrations increased from the primary producers (phytoplankton) through the different trophic levels of fish species, as shown in a study performed by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
- The amount of PCBs in the walleye is four times greater than in the phytoplankton.
- Birds that eat these fish may have PCB levels that are at least one order of magnitude higher than those found in the lake fish.
- The PCB concentrations are shown in the chart.
- There are numbers on the x-axis that show enrichment with heavy nitrogen (15N) which is a marker for increasing trophic level.
- The fish in higher trophic levels accumulate more PCBs than the fish in lower trophic levels.
- Heavy metals, such as mercury and cadmium, can accumulate in certain types of seafood.
- The EPA recommends that pregnant women and young children not eat swordfish, shark, king mackerel, or tilefish because of their high mercury content.
- Salmon, tilapia, shrimp, pollock, and catfish are low in mercury and should be eaten by these individuals.
- A good example of how ecology can affect our lives is biomagnification.
- By the end of this section, you will be able to discuss the biogeochemical cycles of water, carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, and sulfur.
- The matter that makes up living organisms is recycled.
- Carbon, nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, and sulfur can be found in a variety of chemical forms and may exist for long periods in the atmosphere, on land, in water, or beneath the Earth's surface.
- weathering, erosion, water drainage, and the subduction of the continental plates all play a role in this recycling of materials.
- Oxygen and hydrogen are essential to all living processes.
- Water is in the atmosphere.
- Carbon is an important component of fossil fuels.
- Nitrogen is critical to human agriculture and is a major component of our nucleic acids.
- One of the main ingredients in artificial fertilizers used in agriculture and their associated environmental impacts on our surface water is Phosphorus, a major component of nucleic acid.
- The elements are interdependent.
- The movement of water is important for the removal of nitrogen and phosphate from the water.
- The ocean is a major source of carbon.
- The entire biosphere, from one living organisms to another, and between the biotic and abiotic world, is home to mineral nutrients.
- There is a link to learn more about biogeochemical cycles.
- The basis of all living processes is water.
- Almost all of the water on Earth is non-potable.
- 99 percent of the water is locked underground.
- Less than 1 percent of fresh water is easily accessible.
- A lack of fresh surface water can have huge effects on the ecology of living things.
- The organisms have to adapt to changing water supplies.
- Humans have developed technologies to increase water availability, such as digging wells and using desalination to get water from the ocean.
- Less than 1 percent of fresh water is easily accessible to living things, and only 2.5 percent of water on Earth is fresh water.
- Water cycling is important to the ecology.
- Water has an influence on the environment.
- The oceans, underground, and as ice hold most of the water on Earth.
- The average residence time for water in the Earth's water is shown in the graph.
- The water cycle is driven by the sun's energy as it warms the oceans and other surface waters.
- Large amounts of water vapor are deposited into the atmosphere when liquid surface water and frozen water are combined.
- Over time, this water vapor condenses into clouds as liquid or frozen droplets and is eventually followed by precipitation, which returns water to the Earth's surface.
- If rain is near the surface, it may evaporate, if it is beneath the surface, or if it is stored for a long time.
- The flow of fresh water from rain or melting ice can be easily observed.
- Runoff can travel through streams and lakes to the ocean.
- There is a link to learn more about the world's fresh water supply.
- Minerals, including carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, and sulfur, are cycled from land to water through rain and surface runoff.
- As these cycles are described, the environmental effects of runoff will be discussed.
- Water from the land and oceans enters the atmosphere when it condenses into clouds and falls as rain or snow.
- Precipitated water can enter freshwater bodies.
- When the ocean reenters the cycle is complete.
- The second most abundant element is carbon.
- The structure of macromolecules is important to living organisms because of the presence of carbon.
- There are two sub-cycles of the carbon cycle, one dealing with rapid carbon exchange among living organisms and the other with the long-term cycling of carbon through geologic processes.
- Carbon dioxide is dissolved in water.
- When matter from living organisms is buried deep underground and becomes fossils, long-term storage of organic carbon occurs.
- The carbon cycle is brought back into action by volcanic activity and human emissions.
- There are many ways in which living organisms are connected.
- An example of this connection is the exchange of carbon between autotrophs and Heterotrophs by way of atmospheric carbon dioxide.
- These organisms use the sun's energy to form bonds of carbon atoms.
- The chemical bonds store the energy for later use.
- Oxygen is a by-product of the process.
- The oxygen content of the atmosphere is deposited by the photosynthetic organisms.
- The primary consumers of biological carbon exchange are Heterotrophs and autotrophs.
- Heterotrophs acquire the high-energy carbon compounds from the autotrophs by consuming them, and breaking them down by respiration to obtain cellular energy.
- Aerobic respiration requires oxygen to be obtained from the atmosphere or dissolved in water.
- There is a constant exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide between the autotrophs and the Heterotrophs.
- The carbon cycle is connected by gas exchange through the atmosphere and water.
- The movement of carbon through the land, water, and air is very complex and takes a long time.
- Carbon is stored in a number of places, including the atmosphere, bodies of liquid water, ocean, soil, land, and fossil fuels.
- The atmosphere is a major source of carbon in the form of carbon dioxide and is essential to the process of photosynthesis.
- The amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is influenced by the amount of carbon in the oceans.
- The amount of carbon found in each location is influenced by the exchange of carbon between the atmosphere and water.
- Water reacts with carbon dioxide.
- The equilibrium coefficients show that more than 90 percent of the carbon in the ocean is found in the form of bicarbonate ion.
- CaCO3 is a major component of marine organisms and is formed by some of these ion and seawater calcium.
- The organisms form on the ocean floor.
- The largest carbon repository on Earth is formed by the calcium carbonate.
- Carbon is stored in the soil as a result of the decay of living organisms or weathering of rock and minerals.
- The carbon can be recycled into water.
- Fossil fuels are the remains of plants that take millions of years to form.
- Fossil fuels are considered nonrenewable because of their use.
- Land beneath the surface of the ocean can be used as a conduit for carbon to enter the atmosphere.
- Carbon dioxide is released when a volcano erupts.
- Fossil fuels and other materials are burned by humans.
- Humans have increased the release of carbon and carbon compounds, which has affected the climate and overall environment.
- Humans increase atmospheric carbon.
- The large numbers of land animals raised to feed the Earth's growing population results in increased carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere due to farming practices.
- This is an example of how human activity can affect biogeochemical cycles.
- Scientists take natural processes, such as volcanoes and respiration, into account as they model and predict the future impact of increasing atmospheric carbon on climate change.
- Nitrogen is hard to get into the living world.
- Even though triple covalent N2 is found in 78 percent of the atmosphere, plants and phytoplankton are not able to incorporate it.
- Nitrogen enters the living world via free-living and symbioticbacteria, which incorporate nitrogen into their macromolecules.
- Nitrogen fixation is a key role of the cyanobacteria in most aquatic environments.
- Nitrogen can be "fix" by the cyanobacteria.
- Pea, beans, and peanuts are provided with organic nitrogen by Rhizobiumbacteria, which live in the root nodules of the legumes.
- Azotobacter is one of the important nitrogen fixers.
- Primary production and decomposition are limited by the available supply of nitrogen, which is why it is important to study organic nitrogen.
- Ammonification, nitrification, and denitrification are the three steps in the process.
- First, the ammonification process converts nitrogenous waste from living animals or from the remains of dead animals into ammonium by certain bacteria and fungi.
- The NO2 is converted to ammonium through nitrification.
- Similar organisms convert nitrites to nitrates.
- The process of denitrification happens when the nitrates are converted into nitrogen gas bybacteria.
- Nitrogen enters the living world from the atmosphere.
- This nitrogen and nitrogenous waste from animals is then processed back into gaseous nitrogen by soilbacteria, which in turn supplies the land with organic nitrogen they need.
- Nitrogen can be released into the environment by two primary means: the burning of fossil fuels, which releases nitrogen oxides, and the use of artificial fertilization, which washes nitrogen into lakes, streams, and rivers.
- Acid rain, HNO3 and greenhouse gas are all associated with atmospheric nitrogen and could be causing climate change.
- In the marine nitrogen cycle, the ammonification, nitrification, and denitrification processes are performed by marinebacteria.
- Some of the nitrogen falls to the ocean floor, which can be moved to land by the Earth's surface.
- Although the movement of nitrogen from rock directly into living systems has been seen as insignificant compared with nitrogen fixed from the atmosphere, a recent study showed that this process may indeed be significant and should be included in any study of the global nitrogen cycle.
- It is an essential component of living processes and makes up the supportive components of our bones.
- In aquatic environments, the limitation of Phosphorus is necessary for growth.
- The Phosphor ion is found in nature.
- Natural surface runoff is a result of human activity and occurs when it is washed away by weathering.
- The rock is from the ocean.
- The bodies of ocean organisms and their excretions form the majority of the ocean sediments.
- In remote regions, volcanic ash, aerosols, and mineral dust may be significant sources ofphosphate.
- The uplifting of areas of the Earth's surface moves the land over geologic time.
- In the ocean and marine environments, the exchange of Phosphorus is reciprocated.
- The average time it takes forphosphate to move from the ocean to the land is between 20,000 and 100,000 years.
- Weathering of rocks and volcanic activity releasesphosphate into the soil, water, and air, where it becomes available to food webs.
- The oceans are affected by surface runoff, groundwater flow, and river flow.
- The ocean water hasphosphate dissolved in it.
- The ocean floor is where the marine food webs fall.
- Dead zones in lakes and at the mouths of many major rivers are caused by this process.
- Dead zones occur when excessive growth of organisms depletes oxygen and kills fauna.
- Large dead zones are found in coastal areas.
- More than 400 dead zones were present as of 2008, and the number of dead zones has been increasing for several years.
- There is a dead zone of over 8500 square miles off the coast of the United States in the Gulf of Mexico.
- Several lake and bay environments, including the Chesapeake Bay in the eastern United States, are negatively affected by nitrates andphosphates fromfertilizers.
- The satellite image shows the environment of the bay.
- A member of the Army Corps of Engineers is holding a clump of oysters.
- The Chesapeake Bay is one of the most scenic areas on the planet and it is now in distress.
- In the 1970s, the bay was one of the first to identify dead zones, which continue to kill many fish and bottom-dwelling species.
- The decline of several species in the bay is due to excess nitrogen in the water.
- The source of thefertilizer is not limited to agricultural practices.
- There are more than 150 rivers and streams that are empty into the bay that are carryingfertilizer from lawns and gardens.
- The decline of the bay requires the cooperation of industry, agriculture, and everyday homeowners.
- More than 200,000 acres of oyster reefs existed in the bay in the 1700s, but the number has now declined to only 36,000 acres.
- Between 1982 and 2007, oyster harvesting declined by 88 percent.
- The decline was due to overharvesting.
- Oysters need a certain minimum population density to reproduce.
- The oyster population and locations have been altered by human activity.
- The restoration of the oyster population in the bay has been a mixed success.
- Many people find oysters good to eat and clean up the bay.
- Oysters clean the water around them as they eat.
- In the 1700s, it was estimated that it took only a few days for the oyster population to filter the entire bay.
- It is estimated that the current population would take nearly a year to do the same job.
- Restoration efforts have been going on for several years.
- The goal is to increase population density so oysters can reproduce more efficiently.
- The Virginia Institute of Marine Science for the College of William and Mary has developed many disease-resistant varieties that have been used in the construction of oyster reefs.
- Efforts to clean and restore the bay by Virginia and Delaware have been hampered because much of the pollution entering the bay comes from other states.
- The new oyster strains have spawned a new and economically viable industry which supplies oysters for food and profit, but also has the added benefit of cleaning the bay.
- The macromolecules of living things have sulfur as an essential element.
- It is involved in the formation of disulfide bonds within proteins, which help to determine their 3-D folding patterns, and hence their functions.
- Sulfur dioxide is found in the form of sulfur dioxide and enters the atmosphere in three ways: from the decomposition of organic molecule, from volcanic activity and from the burning of fossil fuels by humans.
- When sulfur dioxide is dissolved in precipitation as weak sulfurous acid or when it falls directly to the Earth, it becomes available to the marine andterrestrial environments.
- Sulfates are made available to the ecosystems by weathering of rocks.
- Sulfates are returned to the ocean, soil, and atmosphere.
- There are four major ways sulfur is deposited on land.
- As rain falls through the atmosphere, sulfur is dissolved in the form of weak sulfurous acid.
- Sulfur is released into the soil by the weathering of sulfur-containing rocks.
- These rocks come from the ocean and are moved to land.
- Upon the death and decomposition of organisms, the sulfur can be released into the atmosphere as hydrogen sulfide (H2S) gas.
- There are sulfur deposits near the mouth of the sulfur vent in Lassen Volcanic National Park.
- Sulfur enters the ocean from a variety of sources.
- Some organisms use sulfur as a biological energy source.
- Sulfates are supported in the form of sulfur.
- The balance of the global sulfur cycle has been altered by human activities.
- Hydrogen sulfide gas is released into the atmosphere when large quantities of fossil fuels are burned.
- Acid rain damages the natural environment by lowering the pH of lakes, which kills many of the resident fauna, and it also affects the man-made environment through the chemical degradation of buildings.
- The Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC, has been damaged by acid rain over the years.
- There is a link to learn more about global climate change.
- Modeling of energy is best done underground.
- Ecological pyramids of energy are one of the ways in which models of ecosystems can be used to understand how environmental changes affect the structure and dynamics of the system.
- Simulation models work best with aholistic food environment.
- Water, carbon, and webs are important.
- Pollution, oil spills, and other human activities may cause Organisms to acquire energy in a variety of global climate change.
- The health of Earth is dependent on how the energy flows from the bottom to the top of the food web and how to protect it from irreversible damage.
- A re-created environment in a laboratory environment is considered to be a state.
- Organisms can make their own food.
- A food chain's position is known as its ________.
- The mussels live at the NW Eifuku volcano.
- The cycle of movement of minerals through organisms is called a _____ cycle.
- Carbon is present in the atmosphere.
- The average time a molecule spends in its body is called bioentropy.
How would the loss of fungi in a forest be described?
- There are three types of pyramids.