5B - Nutrient cycles Flashcards
What 2 nutrient cycles do we need to know?
Nitrogen cycle and phosphorus cycle.
What two things have an important role in nutrient recycling?
Bacteria and fungi
What is a natural ecosystem?
One that hasn’t been changed by human activity.
How are nutrients recycled in a natural ecosystem?
Through food webs.
What often disrupts the recycling of nutrients through food webs in a natural ecosystem?
Human activity
Why are fungi and bacteria important in food webs?
Because many are saprobionts (a type of decomposer) - they feed on the remains of dead plants and animals and on their waste products (faeces, urine), breaking them down. This allows important chemical elements in the remains to be recycled.
How do saprobionts get their nutrients?
They secrete enzymes and digest their food externally, then absorb the nutrients they need.
What is it called when saprobionts digest their food externally?
Extracellular digestion.
What is extracellular digestion?
When saprobionts digest their food externally.
What happens during the process of extracellular digestion in saprobionts?
Organic molecules are broken down into inorganic ions.
What is obtaining nutrients from dead organic matter using extracellular digestion known as?
Saprobiontic nutrition.
What is saprobiontic nutrition?
Obtaining nutrients from dead organic matter using extracellular digestion.
What are mycorrhizae?
Associations/symbiotic relationships between fungi and the roots of plants.
What are the symbiotic/mutualistic relationships between fungi and the roots of plants known as?
Mycorrhizae.
What are mycorrhizae made up of?
Fungi and the roots of plants.
What are the fungi in mycorrhizae like?
Made up of long, thin strands called hyphae, which connects to the plant’s roots.
How do mycorrhizae help plants?
The fungi have hyphae which connect to the plant’s roots, greatly increasing the SA of the plant’s root system, helping the plant to absorb ions from the soil that are usually scarce (e.g. phosphorus). Hyphae also increase the uptake of water by the plant.
Why is the relationship between the plant and fungi mutualistic?
The plant gets water and nutrients and the fungi obtains organic compounds such as glucose.
What does the nitrogen cycle show?
How nitrogen is recycled in ecosystems.
How nitrogen is converted into a usable form and then passed on between different living organisms and the non-living environment.
Why do plants and animals need nitrogen?
To make proteins and nucleic acids (DNA and RNA).
How much of the atmosphere is made up of nitrogen gas?
About 78%.
Can plants and animals use nitrogen in its atmospheric/gaseous form?
No
What do plants and animals need for them to use the nitrogen gas from the atmosphere?
They need bacteria to convert it into nitrogen-containing compounds first.
What does the nitrogen cycle include?
Food chains (nitrogen is passed on when organisms are eaten), and four different processes that involve bacteria - nitrogen fixation, ammonification, nitrification and dentrification.
Nitrogen fixation
Nitrogen gas –> ammonium ions
Carried out by:
1) Lightening.
2) Nitrogen fixing bacteria - mutualistic bacteria that live inside root nodules of leguminous plants and free living nitrogen fixing bacteria in the soil.
^Mutualistic because bacteria provide plant with nitrates and the plant provides them with carbohydrates.
Nitrogen gas –> ammonium ions
Nitrogen fixation
Ammonification
Saprobionts break down dead organisms and release the nitrogen contained as ammonia which goes on to form ammonium ions.
Nitrogen-containing compounds –> decomposers –> ammonium.
Nitrogen-containing compounds –> decomposers –> ammonium
Ammonification
Nitrification
Ammonium ions –> nitrite ions.
Nitrite ions –> nitrate ions.
Nitrifying bacteria.
Oxidation process - oxygen must be present.