Lecture 4,5 Bio Geo Chemical Cycle
Lecture 4,5 Bio Geo Chemical Cycle
Lecture 4,5 Bio Geo Chemical Cycle
• Due to human activities, the natural hydrological cycle of most river basins is becoming
more and more transformed and strictly controlled.
• The major effects of reservoir construction on the hydrological cycle (excepting runoff
control) are an increase of evaporation and a rise of groundwater table.
• In many dry regions, a considerable rise in the groundwater table can occur because of
water filtration from reservoirs, leakage from water distributing systems, and faulty
irrigation technology. Such a rise may cause waterlogging of plants and development of
soil salinization.
• At some river basins the groundwater table often drops steeply, and this may reduce the
surface runoff and the lower level of the small rivers.
BIO-GEO-CHEMICAL CYCLES
CARBON CYCLE
Carbon is present in atmosphere, mainly in the form of carbon dioxide, and thus
it cycles in this gaseous phase.
Most of the carbon dioxide enters the living world through photosynthesis .
Without carbon dioxide no life could exist.it is vital to the production of
carbohydrates through photosynthesis in plants
Organic compounds synthesised are passed from producers to consumers.
During respiration , plants and animals release carbon back to the surrounding as
carbon dioxide.
The dead bodies of plants and animals as well as body waste accumulates carbon
compounds are decomposed by micro- organisms to release carbon dioxide.
CARBON
CYCLE
CARBON
CYCLE
BIO-GEO-CHEMICAL CYCLES
HUMAN IMPACT ON CARBON CYCLE
• Burning of fossil fuels : The most important human impact on the carbon cycle is the burning
of fossil fuels, which releases carbon dioxide (CO2) into the atmosphere and enhances global
warming.
• Industrialization -operating factories, accelerate (CO2) creation and escape into Earth's
natural environments. This translates to warmer air temperatures and higher acidity levels in
water bodies.
BIO-GEO-CHEMICAL CYCLES
CARBON CYCLE
Carbon from atmospheric pool moves to green plants (producers), then to
animals (consumers), and finally from these to bacteria, fungi and other
microorganisms (decomposers) that return it to the atmosphere, through
decomposition of dead organic matter.
Some of this is also returned to the atmosphere through respiration at various
levels in the food chain.
It is estimated that half of the carbon fixed is subsequently returned to the soil in
the form of decomposing organic matter.
BIO-GEO-CHEMICAL CYCLES
NITROGEN CYCLE
• Nitrogen of the atmosphere is in the elemental form and cannot be used as such by living
organism.
• It has to be FIXED…….. i.e. combined with other elements such as hydrogen ,carbon ,
oxygen to become usable for green plants.
• Nitrogen Cycle is a biogeochemical process through which nitrogen is converted into many
forms, consecutively passing from the atmosphere to the soil to organism and back into the
atmosphere.
• It involves several processes such as nitrogen fixation, nitrification, denitrification, decay
and putrefaction.
• Main sources of nitrogen for plants are nitrates in the soil.
NITROGEN
CYCLE
BIO-GEO-CHEMICAL CYCLES
NITROGEN CYCLE
• The atmospheric nitrogen is fixed symbiotically as well as asymbiotically by a variety of
microorganisms.
• The chief nitrogen fixers are bacteria belonging to the genus Rhizobium found in root
nodules of legumes.
• The fixed atmospheric nitrogen reaches the soil as nitrates, which are taken up by plants for
manufacture of complex nitrogenous compounds which in turn, are eaten by animals.
BIO-GEO-CHEMICAL CYCLES
NITROGEN CYCLE
• This releases nitrogen either in free stage or as ammonia gas in the atmosphere. Ammonia
gas may reach the soil as nitrates through the activity of nitrifying microbes, Nitrosomonas
and Nitrobacter.
• Some nitrates of soil due to activity of denitrifying microbes,.
• Pseudomonas, may also be converted to free nitrogen gas returning to the atmosphere.
• This inorganic nitrogen is again recycled into the organic system upon absorption by higher
plants.
BIO-GEO-CHEMICAL CYCLES
SULPHUR CYCLE
• Sulphur is a component of sedimentary cycle.
• It is found in the gaseous forms (H2S, SO2, etc.) in the atmosphere, and as sulphates,
sulphides and organic-sulphur in the soil.
• SO2 gas present in the atmosphere is produced volcanically, by burning of vegetation, and
and burning fossil fuels.
SULPHUR CYCLE
1. Mineralization of organic sulphur to the
inorganic form, hydrogen sulphide.
2. Oxidation of sulphide and elemental
sulphur and related compounds to
sulphate .
3. Reduction of sulphate to sulphide.
4. Microbial immobilization of the
sulphur compounds and subsequent
incorporation into the organic form of
sulphur.
Phosphate salts that are released from rocks through weathering usually
dissolve in soil water and will be absorbed by plants.
Animals absorb phosphates by eating plants or plant-eating animals.
When animals and plants die, phosphates will return to the soils or oceans
again during decomposition.
After that, phosphorus will end up in sediments or rock formations again,
remaining there for millions of years. Eventually, phosphorus is released again
through weathering and the cycle starts over.
PHOSPHORUS
CYCLE
BIO-GEO-CHEMICAL CYCLES
PHOSPHORUS CYCLE
HUMAN IMPACT ON PHOSPHORUS CYCLE
• Waters are enriched in P from farms run off, and from effluent that is
inadequately treated before it is discharged to waters.
• Surface and subsurface runoff and erosion from high-P soils may be major
contributing factors to fresh water eutrophication.