AQA A2 Biology Unit 4 The Nutrient Cycles RC
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- Created by: Beth Evans
- Created on: 16-09-13 10:19
Definitions
- Saprobiotic Microorganisms (Saprophyte): Organism that obtains food from dead or decaying remains of other organisms
- Niches: All conditions and resources required for an organism to survive, reproduce and maintain population
- Ecosystem: Unit in ecology made up of all interacting biotic and abiotic factors in a specific area
- Aerobic: In the presence of oxygen
- Anaerobic: Without oxygen
- Biomass: Total mass of living material in a specific area at a given time, usually measured as dry mass as water value is variable
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6.1 The Carbon Cycle
- The main source of carbon for terrestrial organisms is carbon dioxide in the atmosphere
- Photosynthetic organisms remove it from the air to form macromolecules e.g. carbohydrates, fats and proteins
- Respiration returns carbon dioxide back to the air
- The concentration of CO₂ is higher at night than day due to no photosynthesis occuring while respiration still occur
- Main Reasons due to human activities:
- Combustion of Fossil Fuels: Coal, oil and peat releases CO₂ previously trapped
- Deforestation: Removes photosynthesising biomass so less CO₂ is removed
- CO₂ is a greenhouse gas and contributes to global warming
- The ocean is a CO₂ sink so keeps it constant
- When organisms die Saprophytes break them down into small soluble molecules using enzymes
- The carbon is then released as CO₂during respiration of the decomposer
- When decay is prevented fossils are formed
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6.2 The Greenhouse Effect and Global Warming
The Greenhouse Effect
- Natural process that occurs all the time
- Due to solar radiation from the sun reaching the earth
- Greenhouse gases trap the heat in the Earth’s atmosphere causing it to heat up Greenhouse Gases
- The major greenhouse gas is CO₂ which is increasing due to human activities
- Methane is also produced when microorganisms break down organic molecules , it occurs in two situations:
- Decomposers break down dead remains of organisms
- Microorganisms in intestines of primary consumers e.g. cattle digest food Global Warming
- Due to the layer of greenhouse gases building up it traps the heat from the sun causing the Earth to heat up
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Consequences of Global Warming
- Changes in temperature and precipitation, the timing of seasons and frequency of extreme events e.g. storms
- Climate change will effect niches available due to organisms being adapted to particular niches
- Animals could migrate to new areas causing competition and lose of native species
- Melting ice gap could cause extinction of wild plants and animals e.g. polar bears and sea levels will rise
- Low land would be flooded and sea water would extend further up rivers making cultivation difficult
- Droughts could occur due to higher temperatures meaning xerophytes could only survive
- Greater rainfall would occur in some areas
- Insect lifecycles will be altered and due to them carrying human and crop pathogens tropical diseases could spread toward poles
- Benefit could be more rainfall filling reservoirs, higher temperatures causing higher rate of photosynthesis so more productivity and a larger harvest
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6.3 The Nitrogen Cycle
- All living organisms require a source of nitrogen to form nucleic acids and proteins
- Plants take most of their nitrogen up via nitrate ions (NO₃-) from the soil
- The ions are absorbed by active transport from the root hairs
- Animals obtain their nitrogen compounds by eating the plants
- Nitrate ions are soluble
- When plants and animals die decomposition occurs and the nitrates are restored to the soil
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The Stages of the Nitrogen Cycle
Ammonification
- The production of ammonia from organic ammonium compounds e.g. urea, proteins and nucleic acids
- Saprobiotic microorganisms e.g. fungi feed on these materials releasing ammonia which forms ammonium ions in the soil
- This is where nitrogen returns to non living components of the ecosystem
Nitrification
- Ammonium ions to nitrate ions is an oxidation reaction so releases energy
- It is carried out by nitrifying bacteria in two stages:
- 1. Oxidation of ammonium ions to nitrite ions (NO₂¯)
- 2. Oxidation of nitrite ions to nitrate ions (NO₃¯)
- Nitrifying bacteria require oxygen to carry out the conversions so the soil needs to have air spaces
- Farmers keep soil light and aerated by ploughing and having good drainage
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The Stages of the Nitrogen Cycle Cont
Nitrogen Fixation
- Nitrogen gas is converted to nitrogen containing compounds
- 1. Free living nitrogen fixing bacteria reduce gaseous nitrogen to ammonia to manufacture amino acids, when the bacteria dies and decay they release the nitrogen compounds
- 2. Mutualistic nitrogen fixing bacteria live in nodules on roots of plants and they obtain carbohydrates from the plant while in return the plant acquires amino acids from the bacteria
Denitrification
- When soil is waterlogged there is a shortage of oxygen and the type of microorganism present changes
- Fewer aerobic nitrifying and nitrogen fixing bacteria are found meaning more anaerobic denitrifying bacteria are present
- This bacteria converts soil nitrates into gaseous nitrogen reducing availability of nitrogen containing compounds for plants
- To prevent the build up of denitrifying bacteria the soil has to be well aerated
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6.4 Use of Natural and Artificial Fertilisers
- Intensive food production makes large demands on the soil
- Due to this the minerals are removed from the soil, in agriculture the remains of the consumer are rarely returned to the same area so mineral ions fall
- The mineral ions need to be replenished so fertilisers are added:
- Natural (organic): consist of dead/decaying remains as well as animal waste
- Artificial (inorganic): Mined from rocks and deposits then converted into different forms to give the appropriate balance of minerals , compounds contain nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium
- Plants require minerals for growth, nitrogen is needed for proteins and DNA
- With nitrogen plants grow taller and have a greater leaf area
- This increases the rate of photosynthesis and improves crop productivity
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6.5 Consequences of using Nitrogen Fertilisers
Effects of Nitrogen Fertilisers
- Nitrogen is essential for proteins and growth and causes the increase in leaf area
- This increases the rate of photosynthesis and improves crop productivity
- The nitrogen containing fertilisers have bad effects to:
- Reduced species diversity as nitrogen rich soils favour growth of grasses so they out compete other species that die
- Leaching leads to pollution of watercourses
- Eutrophication caused by leaching of fertiliser into watercourses
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Leaching
Leaching
- The process by which nutrients are removed from the soil
- Rain water will dissolve soluble nutrients e.g. nitrates and carry them into the soil beyond plant roots
- The leached nitrates reach the watercourses e.g. rivers that drain into freshwater lakes
- They can harm drinking water, prevent efficient oxygen transport in babies and cause stomach cancer
- The leached nitrates are harmful to environment as they cause eutrophication
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Eutrophication
- The process by which nutrients build up in bodies of water
- Most rivers contain low nitrate levels so it is a limiting factor for plant/algae growth
- Nitrate concentration increases due to ,leaching so the plants grow exponentially
- Algae grow at the surface so the upper layers of water become densely populated with algae, ‘algae bloom’
- The layer absorbs light and prevents it from reaching the lower depths
- Light becomes the limiting factor for growth so plants and deeper depths die
- The lack off dead plants and algae is no longer limiting for the growth of saprobiotic algae so they grow exponentially
- Saprobiotic bacteria require oxygen for respiration creating a demand for oxygen
- The concentration of oxygen in the water is reduced and nitrates are reduced from decaying organisms
- Oxygen then becomes the limiting factor for aerobic organisms e.g. fish so they die
- Without aerobic organisms there is less competition for anaerobic organisms
- These organisms further decompose dead material realising more nitrates and toxic waste link hydrogen sulphide
- Animal slurry, human sewage, ploughing and artificial fertilisers cause leaching
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