Nitrogen Cycle
Extra
Carbon Cycle
Phosphorous Cycle
Human Disruptions
100

% of Earths atmosphere that is nitrogen gas


78%

100

movement of particular chemical through the biological and geological, or living and non living, parts of an ecosystem

Biogeochemical cycle

100

Building block of life - its key to the structure of all organisms on our planet.

Carbon

100

Where does the phosphorus cycle start? 

Weathering of rocks

100

Natural disruptions include

earthquakes, landslides, changes in water movement

200

Certain types of bacteria convert gaseous nitrogen into ammonia

nitrogen fixation

200

% oceans that is covered on Earth

70%

200

What phases can carbon be found in

Solid, Liquid, gaseous

200

When the producers and consumers die, what happens?

Decomposers break down the organisms

200

Human actions disrupt both 

biogeochemical cycles and ecosystems

300

Forms nitrates which are absorbed by soil when combined with rainwater.

Nitrogen oxide

300

85%

Evaporation occurs between oceans and the atmosphere

300

2 sources of carbon

CO2 gas in atmosphere, bicarbonate dissolved in water, fossil fuels, carbonate rocks, limestones

300

What take up phosphate at the start of the phosphorus cycle?

Plants and fungi

300

What does cars, factories, and power plants do to the environment?

Release carbon into the atmosphere as carbon dioxide

400

When decomposers breaks down animal excretions or dead animal and plant matter, nitrogen is returned to the soil as ammonium 

Ammonification

400

What happens to precipitation?

Seeps into ground, some drops into ponds, streams, lakes, or other waterways. 

400

The simplest transfer of carbo occurs between

plants and animals

400

For what is phosphorus a limiting factor?

growths of plants

400

Explain poor farming practices. 

Depletion of soil nutrients. Replacing these nutrients through man made fertilisers cam lead to contaminated runoff. When fertiliser-contaminated runoff enters bodies of water, the nutrients promote the overgrowth of algae population and can cause algal blooms.

500

Bacteria change ammonium into nitrate

Nitrification

500

Flows into the atmosphere as a byproduct of photosynthesis. Organisms take in this oxygen and release it as carbon dioxide through respiration.

Oxygen cycle

500

Carbo is retruned to the atmosphere as CO2 by

respiration, burning of fossil fuels, emission from factories, atmospheric carbon is methane

500

What is algal blooms?

Blooms crowd out other plant species and negatively impact wildlife populations

500

Exaplain what herd animals and feedlots do to the environment.

The animal wastes from feedlots can leach into groundwater or run off into rivers, lakes, and streams. Contamination of water with fecal matter can spread pathogenic organisms, causing illness and death in humans and other organisms. 
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