paper 2: Nutrient Cycles Flashcards

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1
Q

why is nitrogen needed in organisms

A

nitrogen is needed to make ATP, amino acids, DNA, RNA, proteins etc.

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2
Q

draw diagram so show nitrogen cycle

A
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3
Q

how do animals in the food chain obtain thier nitrogen and wht do they use it for

A
  • consumers eat other organisms which contain nitrogen-containing compounds e.g. proteins
  • compounds are hydrolysed during digestion into their monomers e.g. amino acids, which can then me absorbed into the blood stream
  • monomers are then assimilated to make new nitorgen containing compondsin the consumer e.g. amino acids make proteins
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4
Q

what is the name of the process of how nitrogen returns to the enivironment from organisms in the food chain

A

ammonification

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5
Q

describe the process of ammonification

A
  • saprobiotic bacteria and fungi secrete extracellular enzymes onto dead organisms, faeces and urine
  • these enzymes hydrolyse nitorgen compounds e.g. proteins and absorb the products e.g. amino acids
  • ammonium ions are released into the soil
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6
Q

what is the name of the process where nitrogen in the soil is converted into a form which plants can absorb

A

nitrification

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7
Q

describe the process of nitrification and which bacteria are used

A

Well-aerated soil (containing oxygen) has nitrifying bacteria​

They oxidise ammonium ions to nitrate ions in two stages:​

Ammonium to nitrite ( NO2-) ions​

Nitrite ions to nitrate (NO3-) ions

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8
Q

describe the process of nitrogen fixation and which bacteria are used

A

nitrogen gas is redcued to ammonium ions by:
1. nitrogen fixin bacteria in the soil
2. nitrogen fixing bacteria in the root nodules of legumes

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9
Q

decsribe the process denitrification and whihc bacteria are used

A

Waterlogged soil has anaerobic conditions.

In these conditions, denitrifying bacteria grow well.

These reduce nitrate ions to nitrogen gas.

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10
Q

why do farmers need to keep their soil well drained and regularly ploughed

A

To avoid waterlogged anaerobic fields so less denitrifying bacteria grow so less nitrate ions are reduced to nitrogen gas, so there are more nitrates for plants to absorb

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11
Q

how to sapprobiotic bacteria carry out decomposition

A

saprobiotic bacteria and fungi secrete extracellular enzymes onto dead organsims. the enzymes hydrolyse the nitrogen compounds e.g. proteins and absorb the products e.g. amino acids. and ammonium ions are released into the soil

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12
Q

what is mycorrhizal fungus and how does the plant and fungus benefit

A
  • mycorrhizae are relationships between fungi and plant roots
  • the hyphae of fungi increases the surface area for absorption of water and nitrates/ phosphates for plants
  • fungus recieves carbohydrates from plant such as glucose
  • example of mutualistic relationship
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13
Q

why do organisms need phosphorous

A
  • make phospholipids for new cell membranes
  • make ATP from ADP
  • used in sugarphosphate backbone of DNA nucleotides
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14
Q

describe the phosphorous cycle

A
  • phosphorous exists mainly as phosphate ions in rocks
  • weathering and erosion causes phsophate ions to dissolve into soil and oceans/ lakes
  • phosphate ions absorbed by plants and incorporated into biological molecules such as DNA, phospholipids and ATP
  • consumers then eat the plants and hydrolyse biological molecules e.g. phospholipids via digestion and are assimilated into new tissue in consumer e.g. DNA nucleotides
  • decomposers e.g. saprobiotic bacteria and fungi secrete extracellular enzymes which hydrolyse the phosphorous containing molecules e.g. DNA in dead organisms and urine releasing phosphates back into soil or water
  • phosphate ions can form sedimentary rocks through decomposition, completing the cycle.
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15
Q

draw diagram of phosphorous cycle

A
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16
Q

explain how harvesting crops and removing livestock can cause nitrates and phosphates to be lost

A
  • crops do not decompose to replace the nitrates/ phosphates thay have absorbed
  • livestock no longer excrete/ egest replacing the nitrates/ phosphates thye have consumed from the plants they have eaten
17
Q

what is a natural fertilizer

A

compost and manure

18
Q

what is an artificial fertilizer

A

chemical compunds which can be added to the soil.

19
Q

what is leaching

A

removal of nitrated and phosphates from soil by rainwater into rivers and lakes

20
Q

explain why natural fertilisers take longer to provide plants with an absorbable form of nitrogen than artificial fertilisers

A
  • atrificial fertilisers add nitrates and ammonium ions and phosphates stright into the soil
  • wherease natural fertilisers need saprobiotic bacteria to hydrolyse the nitrogen- containing compounds e.g. proteins into ammonium ions first and then the phosphate containing compounds e.g. dna into phosphate ions
21
Q

explain why the addition of fertiliser at high concentrations decreases the productivity of the crop

A
  • high conc.s of fertilliser lowers the water potentil of the soil
  • plant root cells have a higher water potential than the soil
  • water moves out of the plant root cells by osmosis
  • plants have less water for metabolic reactions e.g. photosynthesis/ hydorlysis
22
Q

explain eutrophication

A
  • nitrates and phosphates from leaching of fetilisers enters streams and rivers
  • these increase growth of algae causing an algal bloom
  • reduces light available to plant sin water so they stop photosyntheisising and die
  • sapprobiotic bacteria reproduce rapidly and decompose dead plant matter using oxygen for aerobic respiration
  • this reduces oxygen avaialbale for other organisms like fish so they cannot respire aerobically and die