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Cycles Cheat Sheet 2
Cycles Cheat Sheet 2
Water Cycle
Precipitation -> Runoff -> Evaporation-> Transpiration-> Condensation
Sun powers evaporation, precipitation, and transpiration
Reservoirs – Surface water (oceans, rivers, lakes), Glaciers, Groundwater (Aquifers), Water Vapor
Atmospheric Gas, Living Organisms
Importance
Water is essential to living organisms for a variety of reactions and cell processes
Water’s high heat storage distribute heat and determine regional and local climates
Water is a greenhouse gas – essential for maintaining Earth’s temperature – BUT too much greenhouse
gas can be a bad thing
Sculpts landscapes
It is the universal solvent, often interacts with the movement of other cycles because it transports them
The water cycle is nature’s natural water purifier (evaporation and underground bacteria)
Water is a necessity in industry, waste management
Importance
Carbon is the basic building block of the four major macromolecules: carbs, lipids, proteins, DNA, as
well as other important organic molecules.
Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas – essential for maintaining Earth’s temperature – BUT too much
greenhouse gas can be a bad thing
Importance
Nitrogen is a key component in macromolecules such as proteins, vitamins, and nucleic acids (DNA and
RNA)
Nitrogen is a limiting factor for primary productivity
Human Impacts
We add nitric oxide NO to the atmosphere as we burn fuel at high temperatures (cars, jets). This gas is
converted into nitrogen dioxide gas NO2 and nitric acid vapor HNO3 which falls to the earth as acid
deposition aka acid rain.
Anaerobic bacteria break down inorganic fertilizer or organic manure and contribute nitrous oxide N 2O
to the atmosphere. Nitrous oxide is a greenhouse gas.
Deforestation releases large quantities of nitrogen stored in soils and plants, back to a gas
Agricultural runoff of fertilizers, animal manure, and sewage discharge add excess nitrates NO 3- to bodies
of water. This can lead to eutrophication (algal blooms, which bring in more bacteria as algal
decomposes, decreasing the oxygen in aquatic environment, often resulting in fish kills)
Harvesting of crops, irrigation, and burning or clearing of grasslands and forests can cause nitrogen to
wash away from the topsoil.
We have more than doubled the annual release of nitrogen from the land due to the inorganic fertilizers
Phosphorus Cycle
Very slow to cycle in comparison to water, carbon, and nitrogen
Water erodes away inorganic compounds, that include phosphates, from rocks
Water carries dissolved phosphates into the soil where they can be absorbed by producers
Consumers take in phosphates by ingesting producers
Phosphates can be lost from the cycle for long periods when it is washed to the ocean and held in the
marine sediment for millions of years
Reservoirs – Phosphate salts containing phosphate ions, terrestrial rock formations, and ocean bottom
sediments. Does not include the atmosphere
Importance
Phosphate ions PO43- are an important nutrient
Phosphate is incorporated into nucleic acids, ADP, and ATP, bones, and teeth
Human Impacts
Humans mine phosphate salts which are added to fertilizers and applied to agricultural fields. Excess
phosphates from runoff can also cause eutrophicaton (algal blooms, which bring in more bacteria as
algal decomposes, decreasing the oxygen in aquatic environment, often resulting in fish kills)
Clearing of rain forests causes phosphates to wash away
Sulfur Cycle
Volcanoes release sulfur dioxide (a colorless, poisonous gas with a rotten egg smell). Decomposers in
flooded swamps, bogs, and tidal flats also release sulfur dioxide.
Sulfate salt particles enter the atmosphere from sea spray, dust storms, and forest fires.
Plants absorb sulfate ions, and incorporate them into proteins.
Marine algae produce large amounts of volatile dimethyl sulfide (DMS – CH3SCH3). DMS is the
nuclei/particle around which water droplets condensate (aka cloud seeds)
In areas like wetlands and tidal flats, bacteria convert sulfate ions to sulfide ions. These react with metal
ions which form metal ores.
Reservoirs – underground rocks and minerals in the form of sulfate salts S042-
Importance
Essential nutrient – Used in amino acids, proteins, enzymes, keratin
Human Impacts
Changes in DMS emissions can affect cloud cover and climate (DMS is a byproduct of paper
manufacturing)
DMS can be converted to sulfur dioxide, then to sulfur trioxide gas, and to sulfuric acid. It can also
react with ammonia to produce sulfate salts. These can fall to the earth in the form of acid
deposition/acid rain.
We refine sulfur containing oil to make gasoline and burn sulfur containing coal and oil, once in the
atmosphere it contributes to acid rain.
We extract metals such as copper, lead, and zinc from sulfur containing compounds in rocks.