Science, asked by feriha007, 9 months ago

draw the labelled diagram of nitrogen cycle.​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
6

Explanation:

The nitrogen cycle is the biogeochemical cycle whereby nitrogen is converted into various chemical forms

Whilst ~78% of the atmosphere is composed of nitrogen (N2), this gas is inert and unable to be used by plants and animals

Chemoautrophic bacteria can convert this nitrogen gas into compounds that can be assimilated by plants and animals

The Nitrogen Cycle

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⇒ Click on the diagram to show a simplied schematic

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Understanding:

• Nitrogen-fixing bacteria convert atmospheric nitrogen to ammonia

• Rhizobium associates with roots in a mutualistic relationship

Nitrogen Fixation

The first stage of the nitrogen cycle is the conversion of inert nitrogen gas (N2) into ammonia (NH3)

This reaction is catalysed by the enzyme nitrogenase, which is produced by nitrogen-fixing bacteria in the soil

Azotobacter is found living freely in the soil, while Rhizobium forms a mutualistic association with the roots of legumes

Rhizobium forms nodules within the plant roots and supplies ammonia to the plant in exchange for carbohydrates

Ammonia (NH3) becomes ammonium (NH4+) when mixed with water, and this can be used by plants

nitrogen fixation

Ammonification

Ammonia can also be produced from organic sources of nitrogen (e.g. amino acids) when broken down by decomposers

As a plant or animal decays, saprotrophs will decompose organic materials to produce ammonia (and ammonium ions)

This process is known as ammonification and releases ammonium ions into the soil which can be absorbed by plants

ammonification

Nitrification

Nitrification is the conversion of ammonium ions into nitrites (NO2–) and nitrates (NO3–) by nitrifying bacteria in the soil

Nitrosomonas converts ammonium ions into nitrites, while Nitrobacter can convert the nitrites into nitrates

These reactions require oxygen and hence soil must be well aerated to ensure a rich supply of nitrites and nitrates

Nitrites and nitrates are easier for plants to assimilate and hence function as a predominant source of nitrogen for plants

nitrification

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Understanding:

• In the absence of oxygen denitrifying bacteria reduce nitrate in the soil

Denitrification

Denitrification is a chemical reduction process that converts nitrates (NO3–) into nitrogen gas (N2)

It is carried out by denitrifying bacteria (e.g. Pseudomonas denitrificans) in the absence of oxygen (i.e. anoxic conditions)

Nitrates can be used instead of oxygen as an electron acceptor during cellular respiration, producing nitrogen gas

This will only occur in oxygen-poor conditions (such as waterlogged soils) and reduces the availability of nitrates to plants

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