Introduction:
-The biosphere, (from Greek bios = life, sphaira, sphere) is
the layer of the planet Earth where life exists. The biosphere extends from the deepest root systems of
trees, to the dark environment of ocean trenches, to lush rain forests and high
mountaintops.
-Scientists describe the Earth in terms of spheres. The solid
surface layer of the Earth is the lithosphere. The atmosphere is the layer of
air that stretches above the lithosphere. The Earth’s water—on the surface, in
the ground, and in the air— makes up the hydrosphere.
-Since life exists on the ground, in the air, and in the water, the biosphere overlaps all these spheres. Although the biosphere measures about 20 kilometers (12 miles) from top to bottom, almost all life exists between about 500 meters (1,640 feet) below the ocean’s surface to about 6 kilometers (3.75 miles) above sea level.
-Since life exists on the ground, in the air, and in the water, the biosphere overlaps all these spheres. Although the biosphere measures about 20 kilometers (12 miles) from top to bottom, almost all life exists between about 500 meters (1,640 feet) below the ocean’s surface to about 6 kilometers (3.75 miles) above sea level.
The origin of the Biosphere:
-The
biosphere has existed for about 3.5 billion years. The biosphere’s earliest
life-forms, called prokaryotes, survived without oxygen. Ancient prokaryotes
included single-celled organisms such as bacteria and archaea.
-Some
prokaryotes developed a unique chemical process. They were able to use sunlight
to make simple sugars and oxygen out of water and carbon dioxide, a process
called photosynthesis. These photosynthetic organisms were so plentiful that
they changed the biosphere. Over a long period of time, the atmosphere
developed a mix of oxygen and other gases that could sustain new forms of life.
-The addition of oxygen to the biosphere allowed
more complex life-forms to evolve. Millions of different plants and other
photosynthetic species developed. Animals, which consume plants (and other
animals) evolved. Bacteria and other organisms evolved to decompose, or break
down, dead animals and plants.
-The biosphere benefits from this food web. The
remains of dead plants and animals release nutrients into the soil and ocean.
These nutrients are re-absorbed by growing plants. This exchange of food and
energy makes the biosphere a self-supporting and self-regulating system.
-The biosphere is sometimes thought of as one
large ecosystem—a complex community of living and nonliving things functioning
as a single unit. More often, however, the biosphere is described as having
many ecosystems.
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