SG1: Carbon Cycle Flashcards

1
Q

How does the tree take in carbon dioxide?

A

Photosythesis

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2
Q

How is some of the co2 from the tree lost into the atmosphere?

A

Respiration

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3
Q

What happens to leaf litter and dead wood?

A

It decomposes to form humus or organic material

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4
Q

How does the c02 from the dead leaf litter get into the atmosphere?

A

Respiration returns some of this co2 into the atmosphere.

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5
Q

What is sedimentation?

A

The deposition of sediments usually in a body of water.

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6
Q

What happens to the carbon during sedimentation?

A

Can be trapped.

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7
Q

What is carbon sink?

A

Where colder ocean waters are diffusing more co2 INTO sea surface water than is diffusing out to the atmosphere.

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8
Q

What is a carbon source?

A

In warmer oceans, more co2 diffuses OUT rather than into the ocean.

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9
Q

What is the fast carbon cycle?

A

carbon circulates most rapidly between the atmosphere, the oceans, living organisms, and soils. These transfers are between 10 and 1000 times faster than the slow carbon cycle.

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10
Q

What is the slow carbon cycle?

A

The slow carbon cycle can take 10,000 years to potentially millions of years to complete. It explains how weathering and plate tectonic processes control the amount of co2 in the atmosphere.

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11
Q

What is ocean surface?

A

Carbon is stored in a dissolved form in water and in the tissue of marine organisms such as phytoplankton.

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12
Q

What are the fluxes on the ocean surface?

A

Carbon fluxes of photosynthesis and reparation are faster transfers of carbon between the ocean surface, marina biota and the atmosphere.

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13
Q

What does the deep ocean consist of?

A

The death & decomposition of Marine organisms. When they die, they accumulate on the ocean floor & over million years they become compressed and come carbon rich sedimentary rock.

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14
Q

What are the fluxes of carbon in the deep ocean?

A

Very slow & can involve lithification into fossil fuels or subduction into mantle which is eventually released into the atmosphere through volcanic eruptions.

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15
Q

What is co2 like in the winter months?

A

Less photosynthesis which means atmospheric co2 is higher. It is higher in the northern hemisphere because there is most fossil fuel combustion by industry and vehicles. This allows co2 concentrations to climb all winter.

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16
Q

What is co2 like in the summer months?

A

More plant life meaning more photosynthesis which removes a vast amount of co2 from the atmosphere.

17
Q

What is the reasons for the relative abundance of carbon stored in the tropical rainforest?

A

Very high density of vegetation meaning very large store of carbon in vegetation.

18
Q

What is the reasons for the relative abundance of carbon stored in the desert?

A

Very little vegetation and therefore very little carbon stored in vegetation and also very little organic matter in the soils.

19
Q

What is the reason for the relative abundance of carbon stored in periglacial areas (tundra)?

A

When vegetation dies it remains frozen in the soil and does not decompose. This has built up a create large store of carbon.

20
Q

What are the processes which move carbon between stores?

A
  • photosynthesis
  • respiration
  • decomposition
  • combustion
  • fossilisation
21
Q

What is photosynthesis?

A

Process by which green plants convert water into co2 into starch and sugar in the presence of sunlight.

22
Q

What is respiration?

A

The process in living organisms where the intake of oxygen oxidises organic substance to produce energy and release co2.

23
Q

What is decomposition?

A

A decomposer is an organism often a bacterium or fungus that feeds down dead plant or animal matter. Co2 is released into the atmosphere.

24
Q

What is combustion?

A

The process of burning e.g. wildfires, deliberate burning.

25
Q

What is fossilisation?

A

The process by which the remain of plants and animals becomes preserved and carbon is stored.

26
Q

How is the carbon used by the natural world?

A
  • photosynthesis
  • respiration
  • co2 a greenhouse gas
  • sea creatures
  • sedimentary rock
27
Q

How is carbon used by humans?

A
  • economic resource
  • burning fossil fuels - coal, gas and oil for energy
  • raw material in manufacturing e.g. plastics, paints
  • stored in agricultural crops
  • stored in trees which is used for paper.
28
Q

What is carbon fluxes?

A

Rate of carbon transfer

29
Q

Name some stores of carbon?

A
  • Atmosphere
  • oceans
  • sedimentary rocks
  • fossil fuels
  • land plants
  • soils
30
Q

How much carbon in the atmosphere?

A

0.5%

31
Q

How much carbon in the oceans?

A

26.5%

32
Q

How much carbon in sedimentary rocks?

A

68%

33
Q

How much carbon in fossil fuels?

A

2.7%