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biogeochemical cycle

   Also found in: Acronyms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
biogeochemical cycle  (b-j-km-kl)
The flow of chemical elements and compounds between living organisms and the physical environment. Chemicals absorbed or ingested by organisms are passed through the food chain and returned to the soil, air, and water by such mechanisms as respiration, excretion, and decomposition. As an element moves through this cycle, it often forms compounds with other elements as a result of metabolic processes in living tissues and of natural reactions in the atmosphere, hydrosphere, or lithosphere. See more at carbon cyclenitrogen cycle


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Edwards, "Regional water balance trends and evaporation-transpiration portioning from a stable isotope survey of lakes in northern Canada," Global Biogeochemical Cycles, Vol.
But as more forest burns and less forest regenerates, changes in vegetation could alter ecosystems and biogeochemical cycles on a global scale.
Methane Flux from Minnesota Peatlands, 2 GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES 371, 379 (1988).
 
 
 
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