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Atmosphere and Chemical Cycles

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visibility 97update 8 months agobookmarkshare

🎯 In this topic you will

  • Explain how carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen cycle through the atmosphere and living things
  • Describe key processes in the carbon cycle such as photosynthesis, respiration, and combustion
  • Understand the role of decomposers in recycling matter in all three cycles
  • Describe how human activities affect each cycle and contribute to environmental issues
  • Recognize how the cycles connect and influence Earth’s systems and climate
 

🧠 Key Words

  • carbon cycle
  • photosynthesis
  • respiration
  • fossil fuels
  • oxygen cycle
  • nitrogen cycle
  • nitrogen fixation
  • decomposer
  • denitrification
Show Definitions
  • carbon cycle: The movement of carbon through the atmosphere, living organisms, soil, and oceans.
  • photosynthesis: The process by which green plants make food using carbon dioxide, water, and sunlight.
  • respiration: The release of energy from glucose in cells, which also produces carbon dioxide and water.
  • fossil fuels: Energy-rich substances like coal, oil, and gas formed from the remains of ancient living things.
  • oxygen cycle: The continuous movement of oxygen between the atmosphere, living organisms, and Earth’s systems.
  • nitrogen cycle: The process by which nitrogen is converted between its various chemical forms in the environment.
  • nitrogen fixation: The conversion of nitrogen gas from the atmosphere into usable forms by certain bacteria.
  • decomposer: An organism that breaks down dead plants and animals, returning nutrients to the environment.
  • denitrification: A process in which bacteria convert nitrogen compounds in soil back into nitrogen gas.
 

🌍 Chemical Cycles in the Atmosphere

The gases in the Earth’s atmosphere are not just stored above us — they are constantly moving between the air, living things, water, and the ground. These movements form chemical cycles, which are natural systems that recycle essential elements like carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen. These cycles help keep the Earth stable and support all forms of life.

 

🧪 Did you know?

Without chemical cycles constantly recycling elements, the Earth would quickly run out of usable carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen — life depends on these invisible processes!

 

♻️ The Carbon Cycle

Carbon is an essential element in all living things. In the atmosphere, it is found mainly as carbon dioxide (CO₂) — a gas produced naturally and by human activities. The carbon cycle describes how carbon moves through the environment.

The carbon cycle

 

 

🌿 Photosynthesis and Respiration

Photosynthesis is the process where green plants absorb carbon dioxide from the air and use energy from sunlight to make glucose (a sugar) for growth. This is how carbon enters living organisms. Respiration in plants and animals breaks down glucose for energy, releasing carbon dioxide back into the air.

Photosynthesis and respiration cycle

 

 

📌 Important Concept

The Carbon Cycle: Carbon continuously moves through the atmosphere, plants, animals, and soil through processes like photosynthesis, respiration, decay, and combustion — helping maintain life and climate balance on Earth.

 

🧑‍🔬 Decomposition and Fossil Fuels

When living things die and decay, decomposers (like bacteria and fungi) break them down, and carbon is returned to the atmosphere or locked into the soil. Over millions of years, dead plants and animals can become fossil fuels. When we burn coal, oil, or gas, the stored carbon is released back into the atmosphere as CO₂. This has added large amounts of extra carbon dioxide to the air, disrupting the natural cycle and contributing to climate change.

The carbon cycle

 

 

♻️ The Oxygen Cycle

The oxygen cycle is closely linked to the carbon cycle. Oxygen gas (O₂) makes up about 21% of the atmosphere and is vital for most life on Earth. Photosynthesis releases oxygen into the atmosphere as a by-product. Respiration uses up oxygen when living things release energy from food. This process also releases carbon dioxide. Combustion (burning) also uses oxygen and produces carbon dioxide and water. Because of this connection, changes in the carbon cycle — such as deforestation or fossil fuel burning — also affect the oxygen cycle.

The oxygen cycle

 

 

🌱 The Nitrogen Cycle

Although nitrogen gas (N₂) makes up about 78% of the atmosphere, most living things cannot use nitrogen in this form. The nitrogen cycle transforms nitrogen into compounds that plants and animals can use. Nitrogen fixation is when certain bacteria in soil (or in the roots of legumes like peas and beans) convert nitrogen gas into nitrates or ammonium compounds, which plants can absorb. Animals get nitrogen by eating plants or other animals. When plants and animals excrete waste or die, decomposers break down proteins and return nitrogen to the soil. Some bacteria carry out denitrification, converting nitrogen compounds back into nitrogen gas, releasing it into the atmosphere. Human activities like farming, fertiliser use, and burning fuel can alter the nitrogen cycle by adding too much nitrogen to ecosystems — which can harm rivers, lakes, and air quality.

The nitrogen cycle

 

 

🔄 How the Cycles Work Together

These cycles are not isolated — they work together. For example: Photosynthesis and respiration link the carbon and oxygen cycles. Decomposers play a role in all three cycles, helping return elements to the environment. Human actions such as deforestation, pollution, and industrial activity can affect all cycles at once, causing imbalances that lead to problems like global warming, poor air quality, and reduced biodiversity.

Interconnected chemical cycles

 

 

🔬 Why These Cycles Matter

Studying chemical cycles helps us understand how life and the atmosphere are connected. It also shows how even small changes in the air — like a rise in carbon dioxide — can affect living systems, the oceans, and even the climate itself.

Climate change impact of chemical cycles

 

 

⚠️ Common Mistake

Be careful not to treat the carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen cycles as completely separate — they are deeply connected and changes in one can affect the others.

 

🌍 APPLYING CHEMICAL CYCLES

Nitrogen Fertilisers and Water Pollution

In modern farming, nitrogen-rich fertilisers are used to boost crop growth. However, when too much fertiliser is applied, excess nitrogen can wash into rivers and lakes during rainstorms. This disrupts the nitrogen cycle and can cause algal blooms — rapid growth of algae that block sunlight and reduce oxygen levels in the water.

These changes harm aquatic life and reduce biodiversity. Scientists monitor nitrate levels in water and work with farmers to manage fertiliser use more sustainably. This real-world problem shows how understanding the nitrogen cycle helps us protect both food systems and ecosystems.

 

QUESTIONS

1. What is a chemical cycle? Name three important ones found in the Earth's atmosphere.

👀 Show answer
A chemical cycle is a natural process that moves essential elements through the air, living things, water, and soil. Three important cycles are the carbon cycle, the oxygen cycle, and the nitrogen cycle.

2. How do plants take in carbon and release oxygen?

👀 Show answer
Through photosynthesis, plants absorb carbon dioxide from the air and use sunlight to produce glucose. During this process, they release oxygen as a by-product.

3. What role do decomposers play in the carbon and nitrogen cycles?

👀 Show answer
Decomposers like bacteria and fungi break down dead plants and animals, releasing carbon back into the atmosphere and nitrogen into the soil, helping to recycle these elements.

4. Explain one way human activity disrupts the nitrogen cycle.

👀 Show answer
The use of artificial fertilisers adds too much nitrogen to the soil, which can wash into waterways, causing pollution and harming aquatic life.

5. How are the carbon and oxygen cycles linked?

👀 Show answer
During photosynthesis, plants absorb carbon dioxide and release oxygen. In respiration, organisms use oxygen and release carbon dioxide — linking the two cycles.
 

🧾 QUICK REVIEW

In this lesson, you explored how carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen cycle through the atmosphere, living organisms, and the environment. You learned the roles of photosynthesis, respiration, decomposition, and combustion in these cycles. The lesson highlighted how these systems are interconnected and how human activities like deforestation, fertiliser use, and burning fossil fuels can disrupt them. Understanding these chemical cycles helps explain important global issues such as climate change, pollution, and biodiversity loss.

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