Nutrient Cycling Flashcards
What is the Redfield Ratio?
106C:16N:1P
Elemental composition of our planet’s biomass
What do all nutrient cycles have in common?
Common elements have cycles that include biotic and abiotic pools
Elements that are required for the development, maintenance, and reproduction of organisms are called nutrients
Where is phosphorus limiting?
In aquatic ecosystems
What is phosphorus essential to?
Energetics, genetics, structure of living organisms
Is not abundant in the biosphere
What is the ultimate reservoir of phosphorus?
Rock
What does the phosphorus cycle look like?
Marine sediments -> sedimentary rocks -> incorporation into soils, via weathering -> available for active cycling
Where is nitrogen limiting?
In marine and terrestrial ecosystems
What is nitrogen essential in?
Key biomolecules including amino acids, nucleic acid, chlorophyll, and hemoglobin
What is the ultimate reservoir of nitrogen?
In the atmosphere in the form of N2 gas
How does nitrogen fixation occur?
Via specialized organisms, lightning, and industrial production of fertilizer is the primary avenue by which nitrogen can enter ecosystems
What is nitrogen fixation?
Energetically costly
Specialized bacteria enable N input into ecosystems
What is ammonification?
Release of nitrogen as ammonium (NH4+) following decomposition by bacteria and fungi
Excretion of ammonium by all organisms
What can ammonium be taken up by?
Bacteria and primary producers
What is nitrification?
Conversion of ammonium to nitrite and then quickly nitrate
What can directly take up nitrite/nitrate?
Bacteria and primary producers
What is denitrification?
Conversion of nitrate to nitrous oxide, then dinitrogen gas
This change in redox state allows bacteria to use this conversion, instead of oxygen, to break down organic matter
No uptake occurs during this process
Denitrification is the primary mechanism through which nitrogen is lost from ecosystems
Why is carbon important?
It is the backbone of all organic molecules
What do carbon gasses play a role in?
A critical role in controlling climate change
How is carbon removed from the atmosphere?
By photosynthesis
How is carbon returned to the atmosphere?
By respiration
What is decomposition?
The process by which organic matter is decomposed to CO2 by microbes and nutrients are release for uptake by primary producers
What is the production of organic material at the base of food webs tied to?
Nutrients via nutrient limitation
What controls the availability of nutrients?
The rate of nutrient regeneration by decomposition
What is the speed of decomposition controlled by?
Moisture, temperature, organic matter composition