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Nutrient Cycles -Academic

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Nutrient Cycles -Academic Water Cycle (pg.) 1. The movement of water between the oceans, atmosphere, land and living things is the water cycle. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Nutrient Cycles -Academic


1
  • Nutrient Cycles -Academic
  • Water Cycle (pg.)
  • 1. The movement of water between the oceans,
    atmosphere, land and living things is the water
    cycle.
  • 2. Evaporation is the process by which molecules
    of liquid water (vapor) absorb heat energy and
    change to a gas.
  • 3. Liquid water evaporates from oceans, lakes
    and other wet surfaces on the Earth.
  • The energy for evaporation comes from the heat of
    the sun.
  • Transpiration is the process of plants releasing
    water vapor from their leaves.
  • Condensation is the process by which a gas
    changes to a liquid. (water vapor cools as it
    rises)

2
  • 7. Precipitation is water that falls from the
    atmosphere to the land and oceans. Examples are
    rain, snow, sleet or hail.
  • Runoff is precipitation that falls on land and
    flows into streams and rivers.
  • 9. Groundwater is precipitation that seeps into
    the ground and is stored underground in spaces
    between or within rocks.
  • 10. Most precipitation falls back into oceans
    and lakes. Some may fall on land and either
    soak into the soil to become ground water or run
    off into rivers and oceans.

3
Oxygen Carbon Cycles (pg.) 1. Carbon is an
important building block in the bodies of
organisms. All living things are made of carbon!
Carbon is found in sugars which store the
chemical energy organisms need to live. 2. 20
of our atmosphere is oxygen. 3. Carbon can be
found in living things, the atmosphere (as
CO2), in water, rocks soils and fossil
fuels. 4. Producers release oxygen gas as
product of photosynthesis. 5. Combustion is the
burning of materials such as wood and fossil
fuels. 6. Human activity (like burning) releases
carbon dioxide, water, heat and other materials
into the environment. It may also produce
pollution.
4
  1. Producers take in carbon dioxide from the air
    (making it cleaner)and release oxygen back into
    the air for other organisms to use (for
    breathing!)

5
  • Nitrogen Cycle
  • Organisms need Nitrogen to build proteins and DNA
    for new cells.
  • 2. 78 of our atmosphere is Nitrogen gas (free
    Nitrogen) Nitrogen that is not combined with
    other elements is Free nitrogen.
  • 3. Most organisms cant use free N.
  • Nitrogen fixation is the process of changing free
    Nitrogen into a useable form.
  • Most free nitrogen is fixed by certain kinds of
    bacteria in the soil. The Nitrogen is then used
    by plants.
  • 6. Some nitrogen fixing bacteria live in the
    soil, some in the water, while others grow on
    special structures (nodule) on the roots of
    legumes. These plants include beans, clover,
    alfalfa, peas and peanuts)

6
  • 7. Consumers get the nitrogen they need by
    eating plants or other organisms.
  • Decomposition releases a form of Nitrogen into
    the soil that plants can use.
  • Certain bacteria in the soil convert (change)
    Nitrogen back to a gas which is returned to the
    atmosphere.
  • Nitrogen gas is converted into useable Nitrogen
    by bacteria and lightning. Plants take in the
    useable nitrogen. Consumers get the nitrogen
    they need from the organisms they eat.
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