Campbell Biology in Focus (2nd Edition)
Campbell Biology in Focus (2nd Edition)
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9780321962751
Author: Lisa A. Urry, Michael L. Cain, Steven A. Wasserman, Peter V. Minorsky, Jane B. Reece
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 42.4, Problem 1CC
Summary Introduction

To draw:

Simplified diagrams showing one possible path of an atom from the abiotic to biotic reserves of all the four biogeochemical cycles.

Concept introduction:

Biogeochemical cycle is defined as the nutrient cycle that involves both, abiotic as well as the biotic components. The cycle basically, summarizes the chemical components movement in a biosphere.

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Chapter 10 of your textbook describes four biogeochemical cycles (some of which might also be called nutrient cycles) which carry elements and compounds essential to life on earth: the oxygen cycle, the carbon cycle, the nitrogen cycle and the phosphorous cycle. Read the sections in the textbook and refer to the diagrams for each of the cycles.These cycles are constantly going on around us. Think about how we are involved in these cycles. What parts of the major biogeochemical cycles do we witness or experience in our daily lives? Give one example per post or response. Think about where the element or nutrient may have come from or where it may go next and whether the process may have been affected by humans and human activities.A simple example (using the hydrologic cycle, which we studied in Chapter 7): Yesterday I was at the beach and witnessed rain falling into the ocean. This is part of the hydrologic cycle. Most of the rainwater probably came from evaporation of water from the…
The biogeochemical cycles are: Thermodynamic processes that end in the same process in which they started. They are cycles that describe the different types of energy in an ecosystem. They are phases through which the chemical elements pass in the form of molecules through the air and water. Those that represent the continuous circulation of various nutrients.
An estimated 1000 kg of plant plankton are needed to produce 100 kg of animal plankton. The animal plankton is in turned consumed by 10 kg of fish, the amount needed by a person to gain 1 kg of body mass. i) explain why the amount of biomass declines at each successive trophic level.
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