BIOB50H3 Lecture Notes - Lecture 21: Nitrogen Fixation, Tropical And Subtropical Moist Broadleaf Forests, Nitrogenase

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All organisms require specific chemical elements for metabolism and growth, known as nutrients. Organisms absorb nutrients from the environment or get them in their food. All organisms have broadly similar nutrient requirements, but the required amount of each nutrient and some specific nutrients vary: the nutrient requirements of an organism are related to its physiology, e. g. depending on: Nutrients enter ecosystems through the chemical breakdown of minerals in rocks or through fixation of atmospheric gases: 1) mineral sources of nutrients. Soil is a mix of mineral particles, organic matter, organisms, and water. The water also contains dissolved organic matter, minerals, and gases. Tropical forest soils have experienced high rates of weathering and leaching for a long time and are therefore nutrient-poor. Due to this, the recovery of these ecosystems can take centuries: 2) atmospheric sources of nutrients. The atmosphere is the ultimate source of carbon and nitrogen for ecosystems.

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