The Carbon Cycle
The Carbon Cycle
The Carbon Cycle
Carbon is the fourth most abundant element in the universe, and is absolutely
essential to life on earth. In fact, carbon constitutes the very definition of life, as its
presence or absence helps define whether a molecule is considered to be organic or
inorganic. Every organism on Earth needs carbon either for structure, energy, or,
as in the case of humans, for both. Discounting water, you are about half carbon.
Additionally, carbon is found in forms as diverse as the gas carbon dioxide (CO2),
and in solids like limestone (CaCO3), wood, plastic, diamonds, and graphite.
The movement of carbon, in its many forms, between the atmosphere, oceans,
biosphere, and geosphere is described by the carbon cycle (Figure 1). This cycle
consists of several storage pools of carbon (black text) and the processes by which
the various pools exchange carbon (purple arrows and numbers). If more carbon
enters a pool than leaves it, that pool is considered a net carbon sink. If more
carbon leaves a pool than enters it, that pool is considered net carbon source.
©NASA
Figure 1: A cartoon of the global carbon cycle. Pools (in black) are gigatons (1Gt =
1x109 Tons) of carbon, and fluxes (in purple) are Gt carbon per year. Illustration
courtesy NASA Earth Science Enterprise.
The global carbon cycle, one of the major biogeochemical cycles, can be divided
into geological and biological components. The geological carbon cycle operates on
a time scale of millions of years, whereas the biological carbon cycle operates on a
time scale of days to thousands of years.
The geological component of the carbon cycle is where it interacts with the rock
cycle in the processes of weathering and dissolution, precipitation of minerals,
burial and subduction, and volcanism (see our The Rock Cycle module for
information). In the atmosphere, carbonic acid forms by a reaction with
atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) and water. As this weakly acidic water reaches
the earth as rain, it reacts with minerals at the earth’s surface, slowly dissolving
them into their component ions through the process of chemical weathering. These
component ions are carried in surface waters like streams and rivers eventually to
the ocean, where they precipitate out as minerals like calcite (CaCO3). Through
continued deposition and burial, this calcite sediment forms the rock called
limestone.
This cycle continues as seafloor spreading pushes the seafloor under continental
margins in the process of subduction. As seafloor carbon is pushed deeper into the
earth by tectonic forces, it heats up, eventually melts, and can rise back up to the
surface, where it is released as CO2 and returned to the atmosphere. This return to
the atmosphere can occur violently through volcanic eruptions, or more gradually in
seeps, vents, and CO2-rich hotsprings. Tectonic uplift can also expose previously
buried limestone. One example of this occurs in the Himalayas where some of the
world’s highest peaks are formed of material that was once at the bottom of the
ocean. Weathering, subduction, and volcanism control atmospheric carbon dioxide
concentrations over time periods of hundreds of millions of years.
Biology plays an important role in the movement of carbon between land, ocean,
and atmosphere through the processes of photosynthesis and respiration. Virtually
all multicellular life on Earth depends on the production of sugars from sunlight and
carbon dioxide (photosynthesis) and the metabolic breakdown (respiration) of
those sugars to produce the energy needed for movement, growth, and
reproduction. Plants take in carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere during
photosynthesis, and release CO2 back into the atmosphere during respiration
through the following chemical reactions:
Respiration:
Photosynthesis:
Through photosynthesis, green plants use solar energy to turn atmospheric carbon
dioxide into carbohydrates (sugars). Plants and animals use these carbohydrates
(and other products derived from them) through a process called respiration, the
reverse of photosynthesis. Respiration releases the energy contained in sugars for
use in metabolism and changes carbohydrate “fuel” back into carbon dioxide, which
is in turn released back to the atmosphere. The amount of carbon taken up by
photosynthesis and released back to the atmosphere by respiration each year is
about 1,000 times greater than the amount of carbon that moves through the
geological cycle on an annual basis.
On land, the major exchange of carbon with the atmosphere results from
photosynthesis and respiration. During daytime in the growing season, leaves
absorb sunlight and take up carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. At the same time
plants, animals, and soil microbes consume the carbon in organic matter and return
carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. Photosynthesis stops at night when the sun
cannot provide the driving energy for the reaction, though respiration continues.
This kind of imbalance between these two processes is reflected in seasonal
changes in the atmospheric CO2 concentrations. During winter in the northern
hemisphere, photosynthesis ceases when many plants lose their leaves, but
respiration continues. This condition leads to an increase in atmospheric CO2
concentrations during the northern hemisphere winter. With the onset of spring,
however, photosynthesis resumes and atmospheric CO2 concentrations are
reduced. This cycle is reflected in the monthly means (the light blue line) of
atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations shown in Figure 2.
©NASA
In the oceans, phytoplankton (microscopic marine plants that form the base of the
marine food chain) use carbon to make shells of calcium carbonate (CaCO3 ). The
shells settle to the bottom of the ocean when phytoplankton die and are buried in
the sediments. The shells of phytoplankton and other creatures can become
compressed over time as they are buried and are often eventually transformed into
limestone. Additionally, under certain geological conditions, organic matter can be
buried and over time form deposits of the carbon-containing fuels coal and oil. It is
the non-calcium containing organic matter that is transformed into fossil fuel. Both
limestone formation and fossil fuel formation are biologically controlled processes
and represent long-term sinks for atmospheric CO2.
Because CO2 increases the atmosphere’s ability to hold heat, it has been called a
“greenhouse gas.” Scientists believe that the increase in CO2 is already causing
important changes in the global climate. Many attribute the observed 0.6 degree C
increase in global average temperature over the past century mainly to increases in
atmospheric CO2. Without substantive changes in global patterns of fossil fuel
consumption and deforestation, warming trends are likely to continue. The best
scientific estimate is that global mean temperature will increase between 1.4 and
5.8 degrees C over the next century as a result of increases in atmospheric CO 2 and
other greenhouse gases. This kind of increase in global temperature would cause
significant rise in average sea-level (0.09-0.88 meters), exposing low-lying coastal
cities or cities located by tidal rivers such as New Orleans, Portland, Washington,
and Philadelphia to increasingly frequent and severe floods. Glacial retreat and
species range shifts are also likely to result from global warming, and it remains to
be seen whether relatively immobile species such as trees can shift their ranges
fast enough to keep pace with warming.
Even without the changes in climate, however, increased concentrations of CO2
could have an important impact on patterns of plant growth worldwide. Because
some species of plants respond more favorably to increases in CO2 than others,
scientists believe we may see pronounced shifts in plant species as a result of
increasing atmospheric CO2 concentrations, even without any change in
temperature. For example, under elevated CO2 conditions, shrubs are thought to
respond more favorably than certain grass species due to their slightly different
photosynthetic pathway. Because of this competitive inequality, some scientists
have hypothesized that grasslands will be invaded by CO2-responsive grass species
or shrubby species as CO2 increases.
Figure 3: CO2 over the past 140,000 years as seen in an ice core and in the modern
Mauna Loa record. The red line represents predicted concentrations. Figure courtesy
of : www.uoregon.edu/~dogsci/dorsey/ geo103/CO2.Vostok.jpg
Energy
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External Resources
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John Arthur Harrison, Ph.D. "The Carbon Cycle: What Goes Around Comes Around," Visionlearning Vol.
EAS-2 (3), 2003.
http://www.visionlearning.com/library/module_viewer.php?mid=95
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