Wiki User
∙ 10y agoEvaporation-removes water
Condensation
precipitation-Returns water
Wiki User
∙ 9y agoEvaporation: removes water from the atmosphere. Condensation: returns water to the atmosphere. Precipitation: returns water to the atmosphere.
The process that returns water to the atmosphere in an ecosystem is evaporation. Water from sources such as lakes, rivers, and oceans is heated by the sun, turning it into water vapor that rises into the atmosphere.
Photosynthesis returns oxygen to the environment (undertaken by the biological processes of plants).
The ocean removes carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere as part of the carbon cycle. This carbon recycles round and returns to the atmosphere again.Trees, forests and all growing vegetation remove CO2 from the atmosphere, release the oxygen, and store the carbon. If it is a long living tree, it can store that carbon for hundreds of years.
It returns carbon back into the atmosphere.
Just as the Earth's Nitrogen cycle and its Carbon cycle are cyclic, the Earth's Water Cycle is just that; Water Vapor returns to the Atmosphere to complete the Cycle.
Denitrification
Evaporation.
The process that returns water to the atmosphere in an ecosystem is evaporation. Water from sources such as lakes, rivers, and oceans is heated by the sun, turning it into water vapor that rises into the atmosphere.
Photosynthesis returns oxygen to the environment (undertaken by the biological processes of plants).
Precipitation is the process through which water falls from the atmosphere in the form of rain, snow, hail, or sleet. Evaporation is the process by which water is transformed from liquid to vapor and returns to the atmosphere from bodies of water, such as oceans, lakes, and rivers. Both processes are part of the water cycle, where water continuously moves between the atmosphere, land, and bodies of water.
The ocean removes carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere as part of the carbon cycle. This carbon recycles round and returns to the atmosphere again.Trees, forests and all growing vegetation remove CO2 from the atmosphere, release the oxygen, and store the carbon. If it is a long living tree, it can store that carbon for hundreds of years.
Several processes release carbon as gases (carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, methane) into the atmosphere. Three important processes are fuel combustion, respiration, and methane release. -- Combustion of carbon-based fuels (wood, alcohol, biogas, or fossil fuels) remove oxygen and combine it to form carbon dioxide and other compounds. -- Plant and animal respiration release carbon dioxide. This is the reverse operation of photosynthesis. -- Methane is released from ruminant animals, from decomposition of organisms, and from ocean-bottom clathrate deposits.
Water returns to the atmosphere through a process called evaporation. When the sun heats up water bodies like lakes, rivers, and oceans, the water molecules gain enough energy to change into water vapor and rise into the air. This water vapor eventually cools and condenses into clouds, which then release precipitation back to the Earth as rain or snow.
It returns carbon back into the atmosphere.
Just as the Earth's Nitrogen cycle and its Carbon cycle are cyclic, the Earth's Water Cycle is just that; Water Vapor returns to the Atmosphere to complete the Cycle.
The process that returns nitrogen back into the air is denitrification. During denitrification, bacteria convert nitrates (NO3-) in the soil back into gaseous nitrogen (N2), which is then released into the atmosphere. This helps maintain the balance of nitrogen in the environment.
Decomposition breaks down dead organic matter into simple compounds, releasing carbon back into the environment. Respiration also returns carbon to the atmosphere as organisms breathe out carbon dioxide during the process of breaking down food for energy.