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Nitrogen Cycle
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Forms of Nitrogen Ammonia: NH3+ Ammonium: NH4 Nitrite: NO2-
Nitrate: NO3- Gas: N2 Nitrogen Oxide: NO Dinitrogen oxide: N2O
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Each spot on the cycle is a reservoir of nitrogen; a place where it is stored or available in some form Atmosphere Living organisms Soils Oceans
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78% of the atmosphere is nitrogen
Gaseous nitrogen (N2) is not usable to living things Nitrogen fixation must take place
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Nitrogen fixation- processing of nitrogen into forms that are usable by living things
1 of 4 methods Lightning Bacteria Industrial fixation: the Haber-Bosch processes convert N2 into fertilizer Combustion of fossil fuels Bacteria: have an enzyme that breaks down N2 into ammonia
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Assimilation Plants absorb nitrogen through roots
Bacteria can also take up N Animals get nitrogen from eating plants or other animals N is important for making amino acids and proteins Also important part of DNA and RNA
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Ammonification Organisms die and are broken down by decomposers
Bacteria convert the nitrates into ammonia
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Nitrification Ammonium absorbed by soil and then changed by bacteria to nitrite and nitrate Nitrate can then either be used by plants or go through denitrification
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Denitrification Turn nitrates back into nitrogen gas
Completes the nitrogen cycle, putting N back into the atmosphere
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Anaerobic Ammonium Oxidation
Nitrite and Ammonium converted straight to N2 Occurs mostly in oceans
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Humans affect the Nitrogen Cycle
N-rich fertilizers put N into water; can be toxic to babies Fertilizers, cattle and feedlots, and industrial sources also release dinitrogen oxide (N2O) into the air; contributes to global warming
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Humans and the N-cycle Burning fossil fuels and forests releases Nitrogen oxide; contributes to smog and acid rain Wastewater treatment plants release ammonia, toxic to fish
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