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Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences Issues in Ecology Number 1 Spring 1997 by Peter M. Vitousek, Chair, John Aber, Robert W. Howarth, Gene E. Likens, Pamela A. Matson, David W. Schindler, William H. Schlesinger, and G. David Tilman http://www.esa.org/science_resources/issues/FileEnglish /issue1.pdf

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Page 1: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences

Taken largely from

Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

Issues in Ecology Number 1 Spring 1997

byPeter M. Vitousek, Chair, John Aber, Robert W.

Howarth,Gene E. Likens, Pamela A. Matson, David W.

Schindler,William H. Schlesinger, and G. David Tilmanhttp://www.esa.org/science_resources/issues/FileEnglish/issue1.pdf

Page 2: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

Understanding element cycles as part of the major functioning of ecosystems, requires

following a specific "approach".

1st - Accounting: Accounting tells you "where things are", or the distribution of the element in different pools within the ecosystem. 

2nd - Cycling: Cycling tells you "where things are going", and how fast they are moving from different pools in the ecosystem. 

3rd - Controls: Determining the controls tells you "how does the system function, and what factors drive the cycling". 

Page 3: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

The nitrogen (N) cycle is a manifestation of oxidation and reduction reactions the loss and gain of electrons. Oxidation and reduction reactions are also the hallmark of the biogeochemical cycling of carbon (C), hydrogen (H), and oxygen (O): the chemical elements with which the N cycle is most commonly and intimately interconnected.

Page 4: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences
Page 5: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

The impacts of human domination of the nitrogen cycle that we have identified with certainty include:

Increased global concentrations of nitrous oxide (N2O), a potent greenhouse gas, in the atmosphere as well as increased regional concentrations of other oxides of nitrogen (including nitric oxide, NO) that drive the formation of photochemical smog;

Losses of soil nutrients such as calcium and potassium that are essential for long-term soil fertility;

Substantial acidification of soils and of the waters of streams and lakes in several regions;

Greatly increased transport of nitrogen by rivers into estuaries and coastal waters where it is a major pollutant.

Page 6: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

Human alterations of the nitrogen cycle have:

Accelerated losses of biological diversity, especially among plants adapted to low-nitrogen soils, and subsequently, the animals and microbes that depend on these plants;

Caused changes in the plant and animal life and ecological processes of estuarine and nearshore ecosystems, and contributed to long-term declines in coastal marine fisheries.

Page 7: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

http://bcs.whfreeman.com/thelifewire/content/chp58/5802004.html

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Page 9: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

Nitrogen: once upon a time

Page 10: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

Nitrogen FixationGlobal sources of biologically available (Fixed) nitrogen)ANTHROPOGENIC SOURCES ANNUAL RELEASE OF FIXED NITROGEN (teragrams) Fertilizer 80Legumes and other plants 40Fossil fuels 20Biomass burning 40Wetland draining 10Land clearing 20Total from human sources 210

NATURAL SOURCES Soil bacteria, algae, lightning, 140

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Page 12: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

Nitrous Oxide is

1) a very effective heat-trapping gas in the atmosphere

2) unreactive and long lived in the lower atmosphere

3) in the stratosphere it can trigger reactions that deplete and thin the stratospheric ozone layer

4) increasing steadily, but source is still not completely identified

Page 13: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

Nitric Oxide (80% from human activities)

1) highly reactive in the lower atmosphere and therefore much shorter lived.

2) catalyzing force in the formation of photochemical (or brown) smog.

3) In the presence of sunlight,nitric oxide and oxygen react with hydrocarbons emitted by automobile exhausts to form ozone, the most dangerous component of smog.

4) Ground-level ozone has serious detrimental effects on human health as well as the health and productivity of crops and forests.

5) Nitric oxide, along with other oxides of nitrogen and sulfur, can be transformed in the atmosphere into nitric acid and sulfuric acid, which are the major components of acid rain.

Page 14: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

Ammonia (70% from human activity)

1) acts as the primary acid-neutralizing agent in the atmosphere, having an opposite influence on the acidity of aerosols, cloudwater, and rainfall.

2) May have important role in “missing carbon” or ??

3) Nitrogen saturation and

4) Soil acidification and release of nutrients

5) Marked reduction in overall species diversity as the few plant species adapted to take full advantage of high nitrogen out compete their neighbors.

Page 15: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

Nitrogen in Aquatic Systems

Adding inorganic nitrogen to freshwater ecosystems that are also rich in phosphorus can eutrophy as well as acidify the waters. Both eutrophication and acidification generally lead to decreased diversity of both plant and animal species.When high nitrogen loading causes eutrophication in stratified waters where a sharp temperature gradient prevents mixing of warm surface waters with colder bottom waters the result can be anoxia (no oxygen) or hypoxia (low oxygen) in bottom waters.

Page 16: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

Effects of Nitrates, Nitrogen and Ammonia

Methemoglobinemia

Acidification

Eutrophication anoxia in stratified waters

Toxic algal blooms

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Some facts

The process of manufacturing fertilizer by industrial nitrogen fixation was first developed in Germany during World War I.Fertilizer production has grown exponentially since the 1940s. The amount of industrially fixed nitrogen applied to crops during the decade from 1980 to 1990 more than equaled all industrial fertilizer applied previously in human history.

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More facts

The momentum of human population growth and increasing urbanization ensures that industrial fertilizer production will continue at high and likely accelerating rates for decades in order to meet the escalating demand for food.

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Page 24: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

Crops

Soybeans, peas, alfalfa, and other leguminous crops and forages. Non-leguminous, non-fixers – riceHuge demand for soybeans for animal feed

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The Future

In fact, global nitrogen deposition may as much as double in the next 25 years as agriculture and energy use continue to intensify

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Page 30: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

What needs to be done

National and international policies should attempt to reduce these impacts through the development and widespread dissemination of more efficient fossil fuel combustion technologies and farm management practices that reduce the burgeoning demand for and release of nitrogenous fertilizers.

Page 31: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

What you can focus on:

Consumers can also contribute substantially to “closing the open loop” which currently allows nitrogen to be deposited on the land, washed into water courses and flushed out to sea.

Page 32: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

Accounting for the N stocks, flows, and controls in the food stream

Page 33: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

Accounting for N Flows

Page 34: Changes in the Global Nitrogen Cycle: Causes and Consequences Taken largely from Human Alteration of the Global Nitrogen Cycle:Causes and Consequences

Understanding element cycles as part of the major functioning of ecosystems, requires

following a specific "approach".

1st - Accounting: Accounting tells you "where things are", or the distribution of the element in different pools within the ecosystem. 

2nd - Cycling: Cycling tells you "where things are going", and how fast they are moving from different pools in the ecosystem. 

3rd - Controls: Determining the controls tells you "how does the system function, and what factors drive the cycling".