Top Banner
Your questions…your review
27

Your questions…your review

Feb 24, 2016

Download

Documents

Maxim

Your questions…your review. The Nitrogen Cycle. 78% of the troposphere is composed of nitrogen gas. Nitrogen is an important element for the making of proteins, nucleic acids, and vitamins. Processes convert nitrogen gas into compounds that can be used in the food webs:. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Your questions…your review

Your questions…your review

Page 2: Your questions…your review

The Nitrogen Cycle 78% of the troposphere is composed of

nitrogen gas. Nitrogen is an important element for the

making of proteins, nucleic acids, and vitamins.

Page 3: Your questions…your review

Processes convert nitrogen gas into compounds that can be used in the food webs:

Atmospheric electrical discharge makes nitrogen and oxygen gases react to form nitrogen oxide.

Specialized bacteria fix nitrogen gas into ammonia to be used by plants (nitrogen fixation).

Ammonia not used by plants may go through nitrification to form nitrite ions (toxic to plants) and nitrate ions (easily taken up by plants).

Page 4: Your questions…your review

After nitrogen fixation and nitrification… Plant roots absorb these dissolved substances

called assimilation and use them to form DNA and proteins. Animals consume nitrogen through plants or plant-eating animals.

In ammonification, decomposer bacteria convert waste into simpler nitrogen-containing compounds such as ammonia and water-soluble salts containing ammonium ions.

Nitrogen returns to the atmosphere through denitrification by converting ammonia and ammonium ions into nitrite and nitrate ions and then into nitrogen gas and nitrous oxide gas.

This begins the cycle again.

Page 5: Your questions…your review

Layers of the Atmosphere Composed of

different layers with different temperatures, pressures, and compositions.

Fig. 17-2 p. 419

Page 6: Your questions…your review

Soil Particle

Size

Page 7: Your questions…your review

Soil Difference between porosity and permeability

Page 8: Your questions…your review

Soil Soil horizons: series of layers with distinctive

textures and compositions

Page 9: Your questions…your review

Matter and Energy Law of Conservation of Matter: we cannot

create or destroy atoms only rearrange them into different spatial patterns (physical changes) or different combinations (chemical changes). Matter is essential a closed system on Earth

We will eventually run out of matter. There is “no away” We have to deal with

pollutants(degradable, biodegradable, slowly degradable, and nondegradable).

Matter can be recycled.

Page 10: Your questions…your review

Matter and Energy First Law of Thermodynamics/Conservation

of Energy: in all physical and chemical changes, energy is neither created nor destroyed, but it may be converted from one form to another. Energy input = energy output. We can’t get something for nothing in terms of

energy quantity. Energy can be converted into different forms

Page 11: Your questions…your review

Matter and Energy Second Law of Thermodynamics: when energy is

changed from one form to another, some of the useful energy is always degraded to lower quality, more dispersed, less useful energy. Energy conversions result in lower quality energy that

flows into the environment. Energy cannot be recycled – there is a one-way flow of

it.

Page 12: Your questions…your review

Matter and Energy: How does this apply to living systems?

There is a one-way flow of high quality energy through materials and living things which is dispersed eventually as low-quality energy (heat).

Since matter is a closed system, it must be recycled (think chemical cycles).

Food chains indicate how energy flows through a sequence of organisms while a food web demonstrates the complex network of connecting food chains.

Pyramid of energy flow shows that there is a decrease in the amount of energy available for each trophic level. Assumes 10% of energy is available to next trophic level. Limits number of trophic levels. Makes top carnivores the most vulnerable.

Page 13: Your questions…your review

Matter and Energy: How does this apply to living systems?

Page 14: Your questions…your review

Productivity Gross primary productivity (GPP) is the rate at

which producers convert solar energy into chemical energy as biomass.

Net primary productivity (NPP) is the amount of energy stored in organic molecules after respiration loss is factored. NPP = GPP – RL (respiration loss)

The planet’s NPP ultimately limits the number of consumers (including humans) that survive on Earth.

Page 15: Your questions…your review

Productivity

Page 16: Your questions…your review

Freshwater Lakes

Page 17: Your questions…your review

Oligotrophic Lakes

Fig. 7-21 p. 158

Page 18: Your questions…your review

Eutrophic Lakes

Fig. 7-21 p. 158

Page 19: Your questions…your review

Speciation Speciation: when two

species arise from one where they can no longer breed and have fertile offspring. Allopatric Speciation occurs

through geographic isolation or reproductive isolation.

Sympatric Speciation occurs through a mutation or behavior difference.

Page 20: Your questions…your review

Population Density

Page 21: Your questions…your review

J-Curves and S-Curves Exponential growth: occurs when resources

are not limiting and a population can grow near intrinsic rate of increase or biotic potential.

Logistic growth: rapid exponential growth followed by a steady decrease in growth with time until population size stabilizes at carrying capacity (K).

Also see Figure 9-4 on page 166

Page 22: Your questions…your review

J-Curves and S-Curves

Page 23: Your questions…your review

Natural Population Curves

Page 24: Your questions…your review

r-Selected vs. K-Selected Species

Fig. 9-10p. 196

Page 25: Your questions…your review

Survivorship Curves

Fig. 9-11 p. 198

Page 26: Your questions…your review

Age Structure Diagrams

Page 27: Your questions…your review

Demographic Transitions