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CYCLING OF MATTER. Earth: Matter does not come and go. Earth is a Closed System to Matter. Cycles of Matter. Unlike the one-way flow of energy, matter is recycled within and between ecosystems.
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Earth:Matter does not come and go Earth is a Closed System to Matter
Cycles of Matter • Unlike the one-way flow of energy, matter is recycled within and between ecosystems. • These cycles are the water cycle, Nutrient Cycle, Carbon Cycle, nitrogen cycle and phosphorus cycle.
Key Concepts • Matter is what all things are made of. By matter we mean: elements (carbon, nitrogen, oxygen) or molecules (water). • Matter is neither created nor destroyed. All matter cycles through the earth cycles.
Key Concepts • Biogeochemical cycles: the movement (or cycling) of matter through a system. • In general we can subdivide the Earth system into the atmosphere, hydrosphere, lithosphere, and biosphere. • Biogeochemical cycles are part of the larger cycles that describe the functioning of the whole Earth (not just the surface parts).
Layers of the Earth • Hydrosphere- water layer. Liquid, Ice, Vapor. • Lithosphere- Earth’s crust and upper mantle. • - Fossil fuels, minerals, soil chemicals. • Biosphere- biotic & abiotic factors.
Key Concepts • The Carbon cycle is one of the most important to humans because it is important to our existence: --one of the primary elements forming human tissues --necessary to plants, the basis of human food and because it is important to the climate system which sets the background for our environment: -- carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) and methane (CH 4 ) are greenhouse gases which help set global temperatures.
MATTER CYCLES WITHIN ECOSYSTEMS • In any ecosystem, the various organisms depend for survival on other organisms and on their surroundings. • Organisms obtain the matter that they need to build their organic substance form other organisms and from their surroundings.
MATTER CYCLES WITHIN ECOSYSTEMS • Unlike energy, matter cycles within any ecosystem and is reused. • Matter, such as carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus, continually cycles within an ecosystem.
MATTER CYCLES WITHIN ECOSYSTEMS • These elements are sometimes found in producers and consumers. • At other times these elements are found in non-living components – rocks, soil, dissolved in water.
Producers Herbivores Carnivores Decomposers Nutrient Pool The Cycling of Matter
MATTER CYCLES WITHIN ECOSYSTEMS • Explain how elements can be cycled and exchanged between living and non living parts of an ecosystem. • What might happen to a carbon atom from a glucose molecule in the blood of a human?
Key Energy Processes • Photosynthesis:use of chlorophyll. Energy storing process. • 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + solar energy C6H12O6 + 6 O2 • Cellular Respiration: • Aerobic Respiration: energy releasing process. • C6H12O6 + 6 O2 6CO2 + 6 H2O + energy (ATP) • Anaerobic Respiration • Ex. Fermentation: energy releasing process used by yeast and bacteria
BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES • Why is the biogeochemical used to describe matter cycling through an ecosystem? • Two types of biogeochemical cycles • Carbon and nitrogen cycles – where the element enters the atmosphere at some point. The atmosphere acts as the major reservoir or store for the element. • Phosphorus cycle – the element does not enter the atmosphere at any stage. Cycles are more localised. Soil or rocks act as the major store.
What is biogeochemical? BIO:Biology. Life. Living things. These cycles all play a role in the lives of living things. The cycles might limit the organisms of Earth or they might happen along side, changing the environment. GEO: Earth. Rocks. Land. This refers to the non-living processes at work. Oxygen cycles through many systems. It's in you and plants for the 'bio' part of the cycle. Oxygen might also wind up in rocks… The 'geo' part of its cycle. CHEMICAL: Molecules. Reactions. Atoms. All cycles include these small pathways. Complete molecules are not always passed from one point to the next. Sometimes chemical reactions take place that changes the molecules and locations of the atoms. Think about oxidation as an example of the 'chemical' part of these pathways. To sum it up, these pathways are all made of different biological, geological, and chemical processes that help make the world go 'round and life exist on Earth.
Biogeochemical Cycles:Reservoirs & Pathways Atmosphere Biosphere Lithosphere Hydrosphere
Some Major Cycles of Matter • Water Cycle • Rock Cycle • Chemical Cycles • Carbon • Nitrogen • Phosphorous • Sulfur
Nutrient Cycles • nutrient: any atom, ion, or molecule an organism needs to live, grow, or reproduce. • macronutrients needed in relatively large amountse.g., C, O, H, N, P, S, K, Ca, Mg, Fe • micronutrients needed in relatively small amountse.g., Na, Zn, Cu, Cl, • nutrient cycles (= biogeochemical cycles) involve continual flow of nutrients from nonliving (air, water, soil, rock) to living organisms (biota) & back again. • nutrient cycles driven directly or indirectly by solar radiation & gravity. • Major cycles: hydrologic (water), carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus and sulfur.