5-13 Nutrient Cycles Flashcards
In which form do plants need nitrogen?
Most organisms can not use nitrogen gas so they must secure their nitrogen in its fixed form
What are the fixed forms of nitrogen?
Nitrate ions: NO3 (2- charge)
Ammonia: NH3
Ammonium: NH4 (+1 charge)
What are the four nitrogen processes? (No explanation)
Nitrogen fixation
Decomposition
Nitfrification
Dentrification
What is nitrogen fixation?
Forming fixed compounds from nitrogen gas
What is decomposition it terms of the nitrogen cycle?
The breaking down of compounds into ammonia
What is nitrification?
The oxidation of ammonia into nitrates
What is dentrification?
The reducing of nitrates into nitrogen gas
What is biological fixation?
Fixation by microbes
What is atmospheric fixation?
Fixation by lightning where the energy combines with oxygen
What is industrial fixation?
Fixing of nitrogen during the Haber process
What is Rhizobium?
A symbiotic bacteria which fixes nitrogen and takes sugars produced by the plant
Contains an enzyme called nitrogenase that converts nitrogen and hydrogen to ammonia
How do animals secure their nitrogen?
From plants through feeding
What is responsible for decomposition in the nitrogen cycle?
Microorganisms
What are the types of nitrifying bacteria?
Genus Nitrosomes: oxidises NH3 to nitrites
Genus Nitrobacter: oxidises nitrites to nitrates
Out of the phosphorous and nitrous cycles, which is faster?
Nitrous
What are the effects of a low concentration of phosphorous?
It reduces plant growth and slows soil microbial growth
Are soil microorganisms sinks or sources in terms of the phosphorous cycle?
They can act as both
How can fertiliser run-off damage local water sources?
Large amounts of phosphate lead to growth of algea
Algea die quickly
Decomposers break it down
These microorganisms use a lot of oxygen
Oxygen levels decrease in the water
Other organisms die
How do animals absorb phosphates?
By eating plants or plant-eating animals
When animals die, phosphates return to the soil or oceans during decomposition
Then phosphorous end up in sediments or rock formations
Seabirds eat phosphorous-containing fish
What is mineralisation?
When organic phosphorous compounds are mineralised by a wide range of organisms
What is assimilation?
When microorganisms assimilate phosphorous which enters in the composition of several macromolecules in the cell
Some microorganisms can store phosphorous in special granules
What is the solubility of phosphorous controlled by?
The pH and the presence of Ca / Mg / Fe / Al ions
What are natural fertilisers?
Materials derived from animal parts or residues
e.g. manure, seaweed and compost
What are artificial fertilisers?
Man-made fertilisers