5. Biogeochemical cycles Flashcards
What is biogeochemical cycling?
It is when organic matter is decomposed into small inorganic molecules, which are then immobilized again by growing cells. i.e. cycled.
What is an important characteristic in biogeochemical cycling
The exchange of compounds between aerobic and anaerobic environments in each of these cycles
What are the three main biochemical cycles?
- carbon
- nitrogen
- sulfur
Are biogeochemical cycles altered by human activity?
Yes
Carbon cycle (CO2) (4)
- CO2 may be fixed into organic matter either under aerobic conditions by oxygenic photosynthetic organisms (i.e., cyanobacteria, algae, plants) and some chemolithoautotrophic bacteria (i.e., nitrifying, sulfur-oxidizing bacteria) or under anaerobic conditions by anoxygenic photosynthetic bacteria (i.e., Rhodospirillum, Chlorobium)
- Organic matter is oxidized back to CO2 via aerobic respiration, anaerobic respiration and fermentation
- In soil or sediment, carbon may be in the organic matter which may be active (living biomass) or inactive (dead biomass)
- The mineral reservoir of carbon is atmospheric or dissolved CO2 and calcareous rocks and corals (calcium carbonate)
Carbon cycle (CH4) (2)
- Some of the organic matter as well as CO2 may be converted to CH4 by diverse groups of Archaea called methanogens
- CH4 is then oxidized to CO2 by a specialized group of bacteria, the methanotrophs
- Examples: Methylosinus, Methylococcus
What enzyme do methanotrophs use to oxidize CH4 to methanol?
Methane monooxygenase (MMO)
Sulfur cycle (3)
- The many oxidation states of S in various compounds means that reduced S compounds are good energy sources while oxidized forms of S can be used as electron acceptors for anaerobic respiration
- Sulfur is also an important element in the cell i.e., S-containing amino acids such as methionine & cysteine
- Bacteria can degrade pollutants via anaerobic respiration if sulfate is abundant for use as terminal electron acceptor –> dissimilatory sulfate reduction
What can do dissimilatory sulfate reduction?
Sulfate reducing bacteria (SRBs), e.g. Desulfovibrio
In dissimilatory sulfate reduction, what is the energy source, and what is the TEA?
- H2 and/or organic carbon as energy source
- Sulfate as terminal electron acceptor
Nitrogen cycle (5)
- N is an important element in cells (i.e., for proteins, nucleic acids)
- Growth of organisms (plants or pollutant-degrading bacteria) is often limited by nitrogen availability
- Bacteria can degrade pollutants via anaerobic respiration if nitrate is abundant for use as terminal electron acceptor
- dissimilatory nitrate reduction
- In bioremediation, addition of N-fertilizer (i.e., ammonium nitrate) often stimulates mineralization of organic matter by decreasing the C/N ratio
- Ammonia oxidation and denitrification in waste water treatment