The Carbon Cycle Flashcards
Photosynthesis
The process whereby plants use the light energy from the sun to produce carbohydrates in the form of glucose. This removes carbon from the atmosphere and allows vegetation to grow.
Respiration
A chemical process that happens in all cells, which converts glucose into energy. Carbon is released back to the atmosphere but less than is absorbed for photosynthesis meaning that vegetation is naturally a carbon sink.
Decomposition
The process where carbon from the bodies of dead organisms is returned to the air as carbon dioxide. Eg microorganisms decompose leaf litter and the carbon is returned to the atmosphere
Combustion
The process where carbon is burned in the presence of oxygen and converted to energy, carbon dioxide and water eg wildfires or burning fossil fuels
Sequestration
An umbrella term used to describe the long-term storage of carbon in plants, soils, rock formations and oceans
Diffusion
The movement of carbon between the ocean and the atmosphere. Cold water can hold more carbon so during glacials there is more diffusion into the ocean.
Weathering
The breakdown or decay of rocks. Chemical weathering involves the absorption of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, acidic rainwater then reacts with calcium in rocks to form calcium bicarbonate which is then buried and compacted and sequestered in the oceans.
Burial and compaction
Where organic matter becomes buried and is then compressed by the overlying sediment
Carbon budget
A way of using data to describe the amount of carbon that is stored and transferred within the carbon cycle
Carbon sink
Anything that absorbs more carbon than it releases eg the ocean
Carbon source
Anything that releases more carbon than it absorb
Mitigation
Any method used to reduce or prevent emission of greenhouse gases
Carbon capture and storage (CCS)
The technological ‘capturing’ of carbon emitted from power stations. Atmospheric carbon dioxide is compressed into a liquid and is then pumped and stores several kilometres into the ground.
Renewable energy
Energy generated from sources that can be renewed and used multiple times, eg hydroelectric power.
Carbon farming
Where one type of crop is replaced by another that has greater productivity and can absorb more carbon dioxide from the atmosphere