Cycles Found in Nature

The first cycle mentions is a complete Food Web in which scavengers and decomposers convert all dead biotic material into reusable materials. Such material is often referred to as fertilizer. Also dead material may become the food for other creatures especially insects which will lay eggs in the decaying flesh so that the hatching young have a ready available supply of food. Bacteria and fungi will continue the complete breakdown of the complex cellular structure of these once living cells.
This cycle is called the Nutrient Cycle. In this cycle, material moves from the producer to the consumer and eventually some of this material is returned to the producers by decomposers. Comprises food chains and webs if the decomposers are included. Three other important cycles found in nature are
  1. the water cycle. A diagram may be found here
  2. the carbon cycle. A diagram may be found here
  3. the nitrogen cycle.
  4. the phosphorus cycle (just mentioned, not studied). In each of these cycles water, carbon (the building block of all life) and nitrogen (an essential component of amino acids) are used then returned to the environment to be reused again and again.

    Cycles in Nature

    Matter cannot be created nor destroyed in any chemical reaction. It can only be transformed from one form to another.

    WATER CYCLE

    CARBON AND OXYGEN CYCLES

    Carbon Dioxide + Water Food Chains Glucose Sugar + Oxygen

    CO2 + H2O C6H12O6 + O2

    Glucose + Oxygen Food Chains Carbon Dioxide + Water + Energy

    C6H12O6 + O2 Food Chains CO2 + H2O + Energy