n utrient c ycling n itrogen c ycling t hrough e cosystems dr. jeffrey r. corney, managing director...

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NUTRIENT CYCLINGNUTRIENT CYCLINGNITROGEN CYCLING THROUGH ECOSYSTEMS

Dr. Jeffrey R. Corney, Managing Director of the University of Minnesota’s Cedar Creek Ecosystem Science Reserve

D. Kindersley

Nitrogen Free

NUTRIENT CYCLINGENERGY FLOWNUTRIENT CYCLINGEnergy Flow, Carbon & Oxygen Cycling

J. Corney

NUTRIENT CYCLINGThe Nitrogen Cycle

McGraw-Hill

Elm

hurs

t

10% of naturally occurring available nitrogen is generated by lightning.

NUTRIENT CYCLINGENERGY FLOWNUTRIENT CYCLINGNitrogen Cycling Through an Ecosystem

PRODUCERS

DECOMPOSERS

CONSUMERS

ECOSYSTEM

1o 2o 3o

SOIL “SINK”

N-cmpds

N-cmpds

OTHERSOURCES

N

J. Corney

NO3- & NH4

+

N2

&

NOxATMO

SPHERE

NUTRIENT CYCLINGCarbon vs. Nitrogen Cycles

Nitrogen cycling is mostly soil based.

Carbon cycling is mostly atmosphere based.

NUTRIENT CYCLINGCarbon & Nitrogen Cycles Are Linked

U.S. Dept of Energy

NUTRIENT CYCLINGIn the “Top Four” Elements for Life

ASU

Pear

son

NUTRIENT CYCLINGRoles of CARBON & NITROGEN:

“Life as a House”

If Carbon comprises the framing and roofing (FORM)…

…then Nitrogen comprises the appliances (FUNCTION).E

Patr

ol

NUTRIENT CYCLINGKey Component of Life’s Molecules

Hemoglobin & Chlorophyll

Amino Acids & Proteins

DNA & RNA

UD

EL

Wikipedia

NobelPriz

e.org

NUTRIENT CYCLINGCarbon to Nitrogen (C:N) Ratios

McGraw-Hill

Plants ~ 25:1

Animals ~ 6:1

NUTRIENT CYCLING

Atmospheric N2

Nitrogen Is Abundant in Atmosphere

…but, N2 as a gas is relatively inert to life

U.S. EPA

NUTRIENT CYCLING

…but, only plants can absorb Nitrogen directly from the environment

Forms of Nitrogen Available for Life

Nitrogen Free

NUTRIENT CYCLINGThe Nitrogen Cycle

NUTRIENT CYCLINGOrganic vs. Inorganic Nitrogen

Organisms consume other organisms and excrete inorganic wastes.

Inorganic (mineral) nutrients are usable by plants, and are mobile in soil.

Organic (immobile) nutrients are stored

in soil organisms and organic matter.

Organisms take up and retain nutrients

as they grow.

USDA-NRCS

NUTRIENT CYCLINGNitrogen Cycle (zoomed in)

NUTRIENT CYCLING

N2 Nitrogen

Atmospheric Nitrogen

Ammonifying Bacteria

Nitrogen -Fixing Bacteria

Fixing Nitrogen…

NUTRIENT CYCLING

Nitrifying Bacteria

Nitrosomonas

Nitrobacter

Getting to Nitrate…

NUTRIENT CYCLINGNutrients Need Water to Move

?

DK

Clip

art

Nutrient ions are mobile while in a solution of water.

So, how do nutrients move in soil?

NUTRIENT CYCLINGComposition of Soil

PhysicalGeography.net

NUTRIENT CYCLINGInterstitial Spaces

U o

f Min

neso

ta

NUTRIENT CYCLINGGetting Nutrients to the Plants

USDA-NRCS

U of Georgia

River P

artners

NUTRIENT CYCLINGMychorrizhae: Plants & Fungi Together

90% of plant families have mychorrizhal associations.

Agro-Genesis

A symbiotic, mutualistic association between a fungus and the roots of plants.

NUTRIENT CYCLINGMychorrizhal Relationship Up Close

Plant root

Mycorrhizal structure

Fungal hyphae

USDA-NRCS

NUTRIENT CYCLING2 Types of Mychorrizhal Relationships

Nature

Plan

t a G

lobe

10% of plant families, mostly woody species (e.g. pine, oak, birch)

USD

A-N

RCS

80% of plant families, mostly herbaceous species (e.g. grasses, forbs)

USD

A-N

RCS

NUTRIENT CYCLINGPlant-Fungal Cellular Connection

Cold

Spr

ing

Har

bor

Oxf

ord

Jour

nal

Imag

e N

atur

e

RHIZOSPHEREArea of soil immediately adjacent to plant roots and mychorrizhal structures.

NUTRIENT CYCLINGFungi Help Get Nutrients into Roots

NO3-

NO3-

NO3-

NO3-

NO3-

NH4+

NH4+

NH4+

NO3-

H2O H2O

H2O

H2O

H2O

H2OH2O

H2O

H2O

H2O

H2O

M. Harrison

NUTRIENT CYCLINGNutrients Move from Roots to Shoots

Tuto

r Vis

ta

Helicon

NUTRIENT CYCLING

J. Co

rney

NUTRIENT CYCLINGNUTRIENT CYCLINGSOIL ORGANISMS & DECOMPOSITION

Dr. Jeffrey R. Corney, Managing Director of the University of Minnesota’s Cedar Creek Ecosystem Science Reserve

Organic

Garden

NUTRIENT CYCLINGFormation of Soil

Brooks-Cole

NUTRIENT CYCLINGSoil Layers

DK

Clip

art

USDA-NRCS

Surface Litter

Top Soil

Sub-Soil

Rock

NUTRIENT CYCLING

Absolute Science

Cross-Section of Soil

NUTRIENT CYCLINGSoil Ecosystem at Micro-level

USD

A-N

RCS

Rose & Elliot

NUTRIENT CYCLINGProcess of Decomposition of Animals

McG

raw

-Hill

NUTRIENT CYCLINGProcess of Decomposition of Plants

Broo

ks-C

ole

NUTRIENT CYCLINGSoil Food Chain

Landscape for Life

NUTRIENT CYCLINGSoil Food Web

Brooks-Cole

NUTRIENT CYCLINGBacteria, Fungi, & Actinomycetes

Decompose material, mineralize nutrients, fix nitrogen, help aggregate soil particles.

USD

A-N

RCS

USD

A-N

RCS

USD

A-N

RCS

USD

A-N

RCS

NUTRIENT CYCLINGAnnual Microbial Activity by Season

USDA-NRCS

NUTRIENT CYCLINGProtozoans

Consume bacteria and fungi, releasing nutrients when excrete wastes.

USD

A-N

RCS

BLM

Mau

by

NUTRIENT CYCLINGNematodes & Springtails

Roda

le

Consume bacteria, fungi, and protozoans, releasing nutrients when excrete wastes.

TAM

U

USD

A-N

RCS

USD

A-N

RCS

NUTRIENT CYCLINGMites, Sowbugs, Millipedes

Shred plant litter and consume detritus, increasing ability for microbes to decompose material.

USD

A-N

RCS

USD

A-N

RCS

EcoL

ibra

ry

NUTRIENT CYCLINGAnts, Beetles, Spiders, Centipedes

Predators that eat other consumers, controlling populations and excreting nutrients.

USD

A-N

RCS

Dis

cove

r Life

NUTRIENT CYCLINGEarthworms: “Soil Aerators”

Mix soil layers, redistributing nutrients throughout soil, and aerate the soil.

Cary

Insti

tute

Scie

nce

Dai

ly

WO

RM

NUTRIENT CYCLINGGophers & Ants: “Earth Movers”

Move nutrient poor sub-layers of soil to the surface, helping enrich soil layers.

NUTRIENT CYCLINGSoil Organisms By-the-Numbers

USDA-NRCS

1 gram of soil

NUTRIENT CYCLINGSoil Organisms By Type of Ecosystem

USDA-NRCS

NUTRIENT CYCLINGSoil Biodiversity by Ecosystem

USDA-NRCS

NUTRIENT CYCLINGFun Facts About Soil

A single spade full of rich garden soil contains more species of organisms than can be found above ground in the entire Amazon rain forest.

One cup of soil may hold as many bacteria as there are people on Earth.

The weight of all the bacteria in one acre of soil can equal the weight of a cow.

A teaspoon of soil from a coniferous forest may hold tens of miles of fungi.

The air in the upper 8 inches of a well-drained soil is completely renewed about every hour.

The plants growing in a 2-acre field can have more than 30,000 miles of roots, greater than the circumference of the Earth.

Mature trees can have as many as 5 million active root tips.

SOURCE: USDA-NRCS

NUTRIENT CYCLINGMore Fun Facts About Soil

Twenty thousand species of nematodes have been described, but it is thought that 500,000 species may exist.

Every time you take a step in a mature forest, your foot is being supported on the backs of 16,000 invertebrates held up by an average total of 120,000 legs.

There is an estimated one quadrillion individual ants on the planet; that’s approximately 150,000 ants for every one human being.

Where earthworms are active, they can turn over the entire top 6 inches of soil in 10 to 20 years.

Pocket gopher mounds can cover as much as 25% of a grassland’s ground surface, depositing on average 20 tons of soil per acre per year.

SOURCE: USDA-NRCS

NUTRIENT CYCLINGSUSTAINABILITY ISSUESTHE CONCERN:

Nitrogen Deposition & Eutrophication

“Too Much of a Good Thing”

NUTRIENT CYCLINGSUSTAINABILITY ISSUESGlobal Sources of Nitrogen Today

Vitousek & Matson

Scien

tific A

mer

ican

NUTRIENT CYCLINGSUSTAINABILITY ISSUESHaber-Bosch “Synthetic” Nitrogen

Fritz Haber Carl Bosch

Fertilizer 101

Men

lo S

choo

l

Invented process in early 1900s

NUTRIENT CYCLINGSUSTAINABILITY ISSUESNitrogen Use, Agricultural Revolution,

and Human Population Growth

Tilman

NUTRIENT CYCLINGSUSTAINABILITY ISSUESSoil Nitrogen Runoff from Fertilizer

NUTRIENT CYCLINGSUSTAINABILITY ISSUESAtmospheric Nitrogen Deposition

NUTRIENT CYCLINGSUSTAINABILITY ISSUESExcessive Nitrogen

in Mississippi Watershed

USGS

NUTRIENT CYCLINGSUSTAINABILITY ISSUESProcess of Eutrophication

NUTRIENT CYCLINGSUSTAINABILITY ISSUESEutrophication of Coastal Gulf Waters

NUTRIENT CYCLING

Dr. Jeffrey R. Corney, Managing Director University of Minnesota Cedar Creek Ecosystem Science Reserve2660 Fawn Lake Dr NEEast Bethel, MN 55005(763) 434-5131

www.cedarcreek.umn.edujcorney@umn.edu

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