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Cycles and Human Impact

Cycles and Human Impact. Nitrogen cycle. Nitrogen enters the cycle from either the atmosphere or fixation Atmospheric NH 4 + (ammonium) and NO 3 - (nitrate) can be taken up directly by plants N 2 must be first fixed by prokaryotes .

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Cycles and Human Impact

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  1. Cycles and Human Impact

  2. Nitrogen cycle • Nitrogen enters the cycle from either the atmosphere or fixation • Atmospheric NH4+ (ammonium) and NO3- (nitrate) can be taken up directly by plants • N2 must be first fixed by prokaryotes

  3. Fixation results in the creation of NH3 from atmospheric N2 • Nitrogenase catalyzes this creation. This reaction is very expensive. • Most soils are naturally acidic so NH4+ readily forms

  4. Nitrogen fixation occurs either in free soil bacteria or in bacteria that live symbiotically with plants • Legumes are known to have root nodules for this symbiosis • Plants secrete chemicals to attract bacteria, bacteria secrete a chemical that stimulates root formation

  5. Nitrogen in the soil (humus) is converted to ammonium from organic compounds by ammonifying bacteria • Most plants actually utilize NO3-, formed from nitrifying bacteria. • Denitrifying bacteria can return nitrogen to the atmosphere.

  6. Crop rotation • A common practice in agriculture is crop rotation • Cash crop > Legume > Cash Crop, rotated every year • Legume years replenish nitrates in the soil.

  7. Phosphorus Cycle • Phosphorus cycle is considerably simpler than the carbon or nitrogen cycle because there is no atmospheric step • Phosphates (PO43-) in the soil are absorbed by plants. • Phosphates are added to the soil by erosion.

  8. Phosphates cycle through the trophic levels and eventually return to the soil by decomposers. • Geological uplifting can return phosphates to an inaccessible state • Runoff can put phosphates into water • Sedimentation can return phosphate to an inaccessible state.

  9. Decomposition rates control nutrient cycling • The rate of decomposition is the most important factor in controlling the rate of nutrient cycling • In areas without decomposers nutrients would remain locked in organic matter, unable to re-enter the cycle in a usable way

  10. Ex. Rainforests would not be able to function without high decomposition rates. • Most of the nutrients in rainforests are not found in the soil, in fact very few are • High growth can only be kept up by equally high decomposition

  11. Human Impact on Ecosystems

  12. Human impact on cycles • Agriculture depends upon proper knowledge of nutrient cycling • Tilling the soil increases rates of decomposition and thus releasing nitrogen and phosphorus that are later removed by the growing plants

  13. Over time the nutrients in an area can be depleted and must be enriched with fertilizer

  14. Critical Loads and Eutrophication • Too much nitrogen in soil will eventually bleed into the ground water or runoff into freshwater • Nitrogen concentrations in rivers directly correlate with human population size in those areas. • The critical load is the amount of nitrogen that can be absorbed safely by plants

  15. Exceeding the critical load can result in nitrate levels being too high for safe consumption or can result in cultural eutrophication

  16. Combustion of Fossil Fuels • Combustion of fossil fuels can lead to a variety of issues • One problem caused by burning fossil fuels is acid precipitation • Acid precipitation has a pH of less than 5.6

  17. Effects of acid rain • Freshwater systems – Decline in fish populations, rise in populations of acid tolerant fish • Terrestrial ecosystems – Loss of calcium and other nutrients, limiting plant growth

  18. Biomagnification • Recall the energy pyramid and biomass pyramid

  19. Further up on the pyramid organisms must ingest more biomass to survive • As a result any toxic compounds that are present in the lower trophic levels become more concentrated in higher trophic levels • Compounds may not affect the lowest trophic levels as a result because the concentration is not great enough

  20. DDT • Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane • Extremely powerful insecticide • Marketed in the 1940s and 50s as completely safe, used to control typhus and malaria

  21. DDT is credited with the elimination of malaria in the US and Europe • DDT also nearly eradicated typhus in Europe

  22. The Silent Spring • By the 1960s it had become obvious that DDT was not completely harmless to non-insects. • Because of biomagnification organisms higher up on the food chain received much larger concentrations of DDT than expected

  23. Introduced Species • Species transplanted from one area to another • Accidental introduction of species have helped us answer one question in biology: What limits ranges? • May have positive or negative effects

  24. Tens Rule • About 1 in 10 introduced species manage to establish themselves in an environment • About 1 in 10 newly established species become invasive • Invasive species are those which become prolific enough to become pests

  25. The primary problem with invasive species stems from the competitive exclusion principle • They are often better competitors than native species and threaten to drive them to extinction

  26. African Honey Bee

  27. Positive effects of introduced species • Act as biocontrolsof pest species

  28. Biocontrols have the advantage of being cheap and easy to maintain • Effective biocontrols should have high specificity to its prey and be capable of living in much the same habitat

  29. Biocontrols can include viruses • There has been some success in controlling the Australian rabbit population with the myxoma virus which can cause blindness and secondary bacterial infections

  30. Viruses tend to have very high host specificity making them effective biocontrols with minimal chance of affecting other organisms.

  31. Dangers of biocontrols • Biocontrols with low host specificity may just become invasive species themselves

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