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Nutrient Flow and its resources

Date post: 16-Apr-2017
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Page 1: Nutrient Flow and its resources

Physics

Presentation

Page 2: Nutrient Flow and its resources

Nutrient Flow• The living organisms require

numerous elements to regulate their biological activities and for the formation of protoplasm . These elements are called the nutritive elements.

• Some elements such as carbon, hydrogen,calcium,

sodium, magnesium are main components of protoplasm & are required in large quantity.

Page 3: Nutrient Flow and its resources

Nutrient Flow

Page 4: Nutrient Flow and its resources

Resources• A resource is a source or supply from which

benefit is produced.• Typically resources are materials, energy,

services, staff, knowledge, or other assets that are transformed to produce benefit and in the process may be consumed or made unavailable.

• Benefits of resource utilization may include increased wealth, meeting needs or wants, proper functioning of a system, or enhanced well being.

• From a human perspective a natural resource is anything obtained from the environment to satisfy human needs and wants.

Page 5: Nutrient Flow and its resources

ResourcesResourc

esSoilMiner

als

WaterOcea

ns

Forest

Energy

Page 6: Nutrient Flow and its resources

Soil• Soil is the mixture of minerals, organic

matter, gases, liquids, and the countless organisms that together support life on Earth.

• Soil is a natural body known as the pedosphere and which performs four important functions: it is a medium for plant growth; it is a means of water storage, supply and purification; it is a modifier of Earth's atmosphere; it is a habitat for organisms; all of which, in turn, modify the soil.

Page 7: Nutrient Flow and its resources

Soil

Page 8: Nutrient Flow and its resources

Water• Water is a transparent fluid which forms

the world's streams, lakes, oceans and rain, and is the major constituent of the fluids of organisms.

• As a chemical compound, a water molecule contains one oxygen and two hydrogen atoms that are connected by covalent bonds.

• Water is a liquid at standard ambient temperature and pressure, but it often co-exists on Earth with its solid state, ice; and gaseous state, steam (water vapour). It also exists as snow, fog, dew and cloud.

Page 9: Nutrient Flow and its resources

Water

Page 10: Nutrient Flow and its resources

Forest• A forest is a large area of land covered

with trees or other woody vegetation.• Hundreds of more precise definitions of

forest are used throughout the world, incorporating factors such as tree density, tree height, land use, legal standing and ecological function.

• According to the widely-used United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization definition, forests covered an area of four billion hectares or approximately 30 percent of the world's land area in 2006.

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Forest

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Minerals• A mineral is a naturally occurring

substance, representable by a chemical formula, that is usually solid and inorganic, and has a crystal structure.

• It is different from a rock, which can be an aggregate of minerals or non-minerals and does not have a specific chemical composition.

• The study of minerals is called mineralogy.

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Minerals

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Oceans• An ocean is a body of saline water that

composes much of a planet's hydrosphere.

• On Earth, an ocean is one of the major conventional divisions of the World Ocean, which covers almost 71% of its surface.

• These are, in descending order by area, the Pacific, Atlantic, Indian, Southern, and Arctic Oceans.

• The word sea is often used interchangeably with "ocean" in American English but, strictly speaking, a sea is a body of saline water.

Page 15: Nutrient Flow and its resources

Oceans

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Energy• In physics, energy is a property of objects

which can be transferred to other objects or converted into different forms, but cannot be created or destroyed.

• The "ability of a system to perform work" is a common description, but it is difficult to give one single comprehensive definition of energy because of its many forms.

• For instance, in SI units, energy is measured in joules, and one joule is defined "mechanically", being the energy transferred to an object by the mechanical work of moving it a distance of 1 metre against a force of 1 newton.

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Energy

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