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The Earth’s Natural Recycling Process

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Presentation on theme: "The Earth’s Natural Recycling Process"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Earth’s Natural Recycling Process
Nature’s Cycles The Earth’s Natural Recycling Process

2 Nutrient Cycles Outline
I. Water Cycle 1. evaporation 2. transpiration 3. precipitation Carbon 1. Plants 2. Animals III. Nitrogen 1. Air 2. Nitrogen-fixing bacteria

3 Matter cycles from the environment to organisms then back to the environment.
ENERGY DOES NOT CYCLE!!!

4 WATER CYCLE 2 ways water enters the atmosphere:
Evaporation: water moves into the atmosphere as it changes from liquid to gas Transpiration: evaporation of water from the leaves of plant through open stomata

5 Water Cycle Clouds form as vapors cool and condense
Condensation – water changing from a gas to a liquid (e.g. clouds, water on a window) Precipitation – water returning to earth in the form of rain, snow, sleet, hail. Precipitation can return to oceans through runoff or groundwater

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7 Glaciers

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10 The Carbon Cycle

11 Carbon Cycle The original atmosphere was 95% carbon dioxide but now less than 1% Carbon entered the ecosystem as plants removed carbon dioxide from air during photosynthesis Consumers eat plants (and therefore carbon) and release it back into the atmosphere in the form of carbon dioxide during respiration

12 The Carbon Cycle: The Circle of Life
Dirt becomes corn, which is eaten by cows. The cows are then eaten by humans. The humans are eaten by worms, which decompose what they eat. The decomposed nutrients (i.e. carbon) return to the soil. The cycle then repeats.

13 So where is the rest? Organisms: composed mainly of carbon
Ocean: carbon dioxide dissolves easily in water Rocks: bodies of dead organisms that didn’t decompose; carbon dioxide released into the air when we burn fossil fuels

14 Oil in Alaska

15 The Nitrogen Cycle Why is nitrogen important?
All organisms need nitrogen to make proteins (amino acids)! Air is 78% nitrogen (N2)!, However, there is a shortage! If 78% of the atmosphere is nitrogen, why is there a shortage? Plants can’t use nitrogen gas in that form

16 How do we solve the nitrogen shortage problem?
Bacteria to the rescue! Bacteria can use it! Nitrogen fixing Bacteria: live on the roots of plants and “fix” nitrogen by turning it into a usable form (e.g. ammonia, nitrite, nitrate). Example: Legumes (peanuts, beans, clover)

17 Nitrogen Cycle Animals get nitrogen from eating plants
When animals die, decomposers break them down and release nitrogen gas back into the atmosphere and return some to the soil so plants can reuse it. However, when there isn’t enough nitrogen available, fertilizer is necessary!!

18 Animals eat plants and each other
The Nitrogen Cycle 3 2 Animals eat plants and each other Decomposers break down plants and animals 1 4 5

19 Bioaccumulation Biomagnification: increasing concentration of a a toxic chemical in organisms at higher levels in a food chain. (poisons become more concentrated at the top of the food web) Bioaccumulation: buildup of toxins in an organism Ex. Insecticide DDT


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