Learn About the Carbon Cycle (original) (raw)

The carbon cycle describes the storage and exchange of carbon between the Earth's biosphere, atmosphere, hydrosphere, and geosphere. NASA

Updated on February 04, 2020

The carbon cycle describes the storage and exchange of carbon between the Earth's biosphere (living matter), atmosphere (air), hydrosphere (water), and geosphere (earth). The main reservoirs of carbon are the atmosphere, biosphere, ocean, sediments, and interior of the Earth. Both natural and human activities transfer carbon between the reservoirs.

Key Takeaways: The Carbon Cycle

Why Study the Carbon Cycle?

There are two important reasons the carbon cycle is worth learning about and understanding.

Carbon is an element that is essential for life as we know it. Living organisms obtain carbon from their environment. When they die, carbon is returned to the non-living environment. However, the concentration of carbon in living matter (18%) is about 100 times higher than the concentration of carbon in the earth (0.19%). The uptake of carbon into living organisms and return of carbon to the non-living environment are not in balance.

The second big reason is the the carbon cycle plays a key role in the global climate. Although the carbon cycle is huge, humans are able to effect it and modify the ecosystem. Carbon dioxide released by fossil fuel burning is about double the net uptake from plants and the ocean.

Forms of Carbon in the Carbon Cycle

Photoautotrophs take carbon dioxide and turn it into organic compounds.

sarayut Thaneerat / Getty Images

Carbon exists in several forms as it moves through the carbon cycle.

Carbon in the Non-Living Environment

The non-living environment includes substances that never were alive as well as carbon-bearing materials that remain after organisms die. Carbon is found in the non-living part of the hydrosphere, atmosphere, and geosphere as:

How Carbon Enters Living Matter

Carbon enters living matter through autotrophs, which are organisms capable of making their own nutrients from inorganic materials.

How Carbon Is Returned to the Non-Living Environment

Carbon returns to the atmosphere and hydrosphere through:

Deep Carbon Cycle

The carbon cycle generally consists of carbon movement through the atmosphere, biospheres, ocean, and geosphere, but the deep carbon cycle between the mantle and crust of the geosphere is not as well understood as the other parts. Without the movement of tectonic plates and volcanic activity, carbon would eventually become trapped in the atmosphere. Scientists believe the quantity of carbon stored in the mantle is about a thousand times greater than the amount found on the surface.

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