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Nitrogen Cycle Close Read

Earth’s atmosphere is approximately 70% nitrogen (N 2).


Unfortunately, consumers and producers cannot
generally  make use of this gas directly. Some
organisms have adapted to transforming nitrogen into
more usable forms that  producers and consumers can
use directly. 

1. According to the diagram, which terrestrial organisms are


able to obtain atmospheric nitrogen? 

The terrestrial organism that can obtain atmospheric


nitrogen are nitrogen-fixing bacteria in root nodules of
legumes, and nitrogen-fixing soil bacteria.

2. This atmospheric nitrogen must be converted to what


molecule? 

It must be converted into ammonium.

3. What other organism(s) add this molecule to the soil? 

Consumers, Plants, and decomposers

4. What transformations must occur before plants can use


the nitrogen?

Nitrification to NO2 and NO3 and after that assimilation.


5. What organism carries out the transformations
addressed above? 

Nitrifying bacteria and Denitrifying bacteria

6. How does nitrogen enter into plants? 

Through the soil where the roots are, and the nitrogen
enters the plants through the roots.

 7. How does nitrogen enter into animals? 

The nitrogen enters into plants by animals eating the


plants

8. How does nitrogen get back into the atmosphere?

The nitrogen goes through the entire cycle than goes


through denitrifying bacteria which sends it back into the
atmosphere.

 9. How must carnivores obtain their nitrogen?

Carnivores obtain their nitrogen by eating animals that eat


plants that have nitrogen inside of them.
1. How do terrestrial and aquatic organisms obtain nitrogen?
Animals obtain nitrogen by eating plants and other animals

2. What part of the plant/algae contains nitrogen?

The whole plant contains nitrogen

3. According to the diagram, which terrestrial organisms obtain and


convert atmospheric nitrogen?

Nitrogen-fixing bacteria

4. According to the diagram, which aquatic organisms obtain and


convert atmospheric nitrogen?
Bacteria
5. In what two ways do animals return nitrogen to the soil?
Death, and excretion
6. How do plants return nitrogen to the soil?
By getting eaten by animals and then the animals return it
7. Refer to the previous figure if necessary. What organisms
process dead organic matter?
Decomposers, such as bateria and mushrooms
8. What type of bacteria puts nitrogen back into the atmosphere?
Denitrfying Bateria
9. Use the internet to discover the role of lightning in this cycle?
Lightning breaks down the nitrogen in the atmosphere
Answer the following questions by applying what you
have already learned about the nitrogen cycle from the
previous 2 figures. 

1. What is item 1 showing in relation to the fish? Algae


that gets eaten by the fish

 2. What is item 2 showing in relation to the fish? The fish


decaying and giving it's nitrogen to bacteria.

3. What organisms are represented in items 3, 4 and 7?


Bacteria

4. A step is missing in the diagram above. Before NH3 can


be processed it must be converted into which
molecule?  (Carefully review figure 1 to find the answer).
Ammonia

5. What specific organism carries out this process?


(Using Figure 1). Nitrosomonas bacteria

6. What happens to the NO3 once it has been formed? It


gets consumed by plants.

7. What is the purpose of the organisms at number 7?


How do they fit in to this cycle? To decompose material
and give back to plants.

8. What is item 6 representing and how is it tied to


images 8 and 9? Solar energy
Answer the following questions after reading the infographic
above. 

1. Provide 2 reasons that support a balance, or homeostasis, of


nitrogen compounds in an ecosystem.  Nitrification is a metabolic
process that changes nitrogen compounds which supports
homeostasis as it keeps the nitrogen controlled. When plants
decompose, the nutrients can get processed into nutrients that the
plant can use to grow.
2. What two nitrogen sources are cited above? 
Waste products and decaying plant matter
3. What is the third nitrogen source that is missing from the
infographic? 
The atmosphere
4. What specific nitrogen source is toxic? Ammonia
    What is it converted into? Nitrate-NO2
    What organism does this?  Nitrosomonas bacteria
    What is the process called? Nitrification
5. What is this new chemical changed into?  Nitrate-NO3
     What organism does this? Nitrobacter bacteria
     Why is this a necessary step of the cycle?  This is a key nutrient
necessary for green growth.
6. What allows the cycle to continue? Through a combination of
decay and excretions from fish that eat the plants, waster matter
generates ammonia to continue the cycle.
How do burrowing animals aid in the Nitrogen Cycle?
Write your response below, using
evidence from the image.

Burrowing animals aid in the


Nitrogen cycle by increasing
heterogeneity in soil nitrogen and
light penetration which helps with
getting nitrogen in the soil as it
shows in the image that there is a
lot of high nitrogen in the soil, but at
the top that there isn't a lot.
How do termites aid in the Nitrogen Cycle?
Write your response below,
using evidence from the
image.

Termites aid in the nitrogen


cycle by creating "Nitrogen
Islands." When termites make
their mounds, "fungi process it
[plant matter] into soil-
enriching nitrogen."
How do whales aid in the Nitrogen Cycle?

Write your response below, using


evidence from the image.

Whales aid in the Nitrogen Cycle


as it eats everything that floats to
the bottom and with the whale
pump such as feces and urea the
bacteria and stuff it ate goes back
up so it can start the nitrogen
cycle all over again.
How do fish aid in the Nitrogen Cycle?

Write your response below, using


evidence from the image.

Fish eat plants and other fish. As a


part of waste disposal and
decomposing they turn into
ammonium which then gets
processes by bacteria to be
nutrients for plants letting them
grow.

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