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UNIT FOUR: Matter and its Changes

Chapter 12 Atoms and the Periodic

Table

Chapter 13 Compounds

Chapter 14 Changes in Matter

Chapter 15 Chemical Cycles and Climate Change

Chapter Fifteen: Chemical Cycles and Climate Change

15.1 Chemical Cycles

15.2 Global Climate Change

Section 15.1 Learning Goals

Trace the pathways by which elements are recycled in nature.

Identify specific processes associated with chemical cycles.

Discover how living organisms within ecosystems are affected by or interact with Earth’s chemical cycles.

Investigation 15A

Key Question: How do living things

exchange carbon dioxide?

Carbon Dioxide and Living Things

15.1 Chemical Cycles

The Earth’s elements essential for living things are called nutrients.

Living things need macronutrients in large quantities while micronutrients are needed in small quantities.

15.1 Chemical Cycles

Over time, these elements are transported through the living and nonliving parts of our planet in sets of processes called chemical cycles.

15.1 Chemical Cycles

Examples of these cycles include the:1. oxygen cycle, 2. carbon cycle, 3. nitrogen cycle, and 4. phosphorus cycle.

Even before life appeared on Earth millions of years ago, elements were recycled.

15.1 How living organisms affect cycles

An ecosystem consists of a group of living things and their physical surroundings.

The Sun is the main energy source for ecosystems.

Can you list some living and nonliving parts in this tropical rainforest ecosystem?

15.1 PhotosynthesisPhotosynthesis is the process by which plants and some other organisms convert the Sun’s energy to chemical energy.

15.1 Living parts of an ecosystem

A producer is a living thing, like a plant, that can take the Sun’s energy and store it as food.

15.1 Living parts of an ecosystem

A consumer must feed on other living things to get food and energy. An herbivore is a

consumer that eats only plants.

A carnivore is a consumer that eats only animals.

A consumer that eats both plants and animals is called an omnivore.

15.1 Living parts of an ecosystem

A decomposer is a living thing that consumes waste and dead organisms to get energy.

Decompose means “to break down”.

15.1 Living parts of an ecosystem A food chain shows how each member of an ecosystem gets its food.

A simple food chain links a producer, an herbivore, and one or more carnivores.

Which is the herbivore?

15.1 Pollution in ecosystems

Human activities create toxic pollutants (toxins).

High concentrations of toxins impact living things.

15.1 Pollution in ecosystems Mercury from power

plants falls to Earth with rain and ends up in lakes and oceans.

As toxic mercury is concentrated up the food chain, it can accumulate to dangerous levels if ingested by humans.

15.1 The water and oxygen cycles

Living things need water and sunlight.

Nature allows water to recycle so it can be used in many ecosystems.

Water supply depends on the water cycle.

Like water, oxygen is essential for living things.

During photosynthesis, plants release oxygen into the atmosphere.

During respiration, plants or animals use oxygen to store energy.

15.1 The water and oxygen cycles

15.1 The carbon cycle Trace the pathways through which carbon is

released and absorbed in the diagram below:

Nitrogen is important to living things because it is used to make amino acids, the building blocks of all proteins.

Approximately 78 percent of Earth’s atmosphere is nitrogen gas (N2).

15.1 The nitrogen cycle

Phosphorus is essential for cell replication, metabolism, and structures.

Phosphorus from minerals is absorbed by the roots for use by the plant.

Animals obtain phosphorus by eating plants.

15.1 The phosphorus cycle

15.1 Cycles interconnect Cycles do not have

beginning or ending points.

Because organisms are not 100% efficient at using what they consume, they release heat energy as they metabolize nutrients.