The carbon cycle is the biogeochemical cycle by which carbon is exchanged among the biosphere, pedosphere, geosphere, hydrosphere, and atmosphere of the Earth.
Carbon is the main component of biological compounds as well as a major
component of many minerals such as limestone. Along with the nitrogen cycle and the water cycle,
the carbon cycle comprises a sequence of events that are key to make
Earth capable of sustaining life. It describes the movement of carbon as
it is recycled and reused throughout the biosphere, as well as
long-term processes of carbon sequestration to and release from carbon sinks.
The carbon cycle was discovered by Joseph Priestley and Antoine Lavoisier, and popularized by Humphry Davy.
Main components
The global carbon cycle is now usually divided into the following
major reservoirs of carbon interconnected by pathways of exchange:
- The atmosphere
- The terrestrial biosphere
- The ocean, including dissolved inorganic carbon and living and non-living marine biota
- The sediments, including fossil fuels, freshwater systems, and non-living organic material.
- The Earth's interior (mantle and crust). These carbon stores interact with the other components through geological processes.
The carbon exchanges between reservoirs occur as the result of
various chemical, physical, geological, and biological processes. The
ocean contains the largest active pool of carbon near the surface of the
Earth.
The natural flows of carbon between the atmosphere, ocean, terrestrial
ecosystems, and sediments are fairly balanced so that carbon levels
would be roughly stable without human influence.
Atmosphere
Carbon in the Earth's atmosphere exists in two main forms: carbon dioxide and methane. Both of these gases absorb and retain heat in the atmosphere and are partially responsible for the greenhouse effect.
Methane produces a larger greenhouse effect per volume as compared to
carbon dioxide, but it exists in much lower concentrations and is more
short-lived than carbon dioxide, making carbon dioxide the more
important greenhouse gas of the two.
Carbon dioxide is removed from the atmosphere primarily through photosynthesis
and enters the terrestrial and oceanic biospheres. Carbon dioxide also
dissolves directly from the atmosphere into bodies of water (ocean,
lakes, etc.), as well as dissolving in precipitation as raindrops fall
through the atmosphere. When dissolved in water, carbon dioxide reacts
with water molecules and forms carbonic acid,
which contributes to ocean acidity. It can then be absorbed by rocks
through weathering. It also can acidify other surfaces it touches or be
washed into the ocean.
Human activities over the past two centuries have significantly
increased the amount of carbon in the atmosphere, mainly in the form of
carbon dioxide, both by modifying ecosystems' ability to extract carbon
dioxide from the atmosphere and by emitting it directly, e.g., by
burning fossil fuels and manufacturing concrete.
In the extremely far future, the carbon cycle will likely speed up the rate of carbon dioxide is absorbed into the soil from carbonate–silicate cycle. This is mainly caused by the increased luminosity of the Sun, which speeds up the rate of surface weathering.
This will eventually cause most of the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere
to be squelched into the Earth's crust as carbonate. Though volcanoes
will continue to pump carbon dioxide into the atmosphere in the short
term, it will not be enough to keep the carbon dioxide level stable in
the long term. Once the carbon dioxide level falls below 50 particles per million, C3 photosynthesis will no longer be possible. This is expected to occur about 600 million years from now.
Once the oceans on the Earth evaporate in about 1.1 billion years from now,
plate tectonics will very likely stop due to the lack of water to
lubricate them. The lack of volcanoes pumping out carbon dioxide will
cause the carbon cycle to end between 1 billion and 2 billion years into
the future.
Terrestrial biosphere
The terrestrial biosphere includes the organic carbon in all
land-living organisms, both alive and dead, as well as carbon stored in soils. About 500 gigatons of carbon are stored above ground in plants and other living organisms, while soil holds approximately 1,500 gigatons of carbon. Most carbon in the terrestrial biosphere is organic carbon, while about a third of soil carbon is stored in inorganic forms, such as calcium carbonate. Organic carbon is a major component of all organisms living on earth. Autotrophs extract it from the air in the form of carbon dioxide, converting it into organic carbon, while heterotrophs receive carbon by consuming other organisms.
Because carbon uptake in the terrestrial biosphere is dependent
on biotic factors, it follows a diurnal and seasonal cycle. In CO2 measurements, this feature is apparent in the Keeling curve. It is strongest in the northern hemisphere
because this hemisphere has more land mass than the southern hemisphere
and thus more room for ecosystems to absorb and emit carbon.
Carbon leaves the terrestrial biosphere in several ways and on different time scales. The combustion or respiration
of organic carbon releases it rapidly into the atmosphere. It can also
be exported into the ocean through rivers or remain sequestered in soils
in the form of inert carbon. Carbon stored in soil can remain there for up to thousands of years before being washed into rivers by erosion or released into the atmosphere through soil respiration. Between 1989 and 2008 soil respiration increased by about 0.1% per year. In 2008, the global total of CO2
released by soil respiration was roughly 98 billion tonnes, about 10
times more carbon than humans are now putting into the atmosphere each
year by burning fossil fuel (this does not represent a net transfer of
carbon from soil to atmosphere, as the respiration is largely offset by
inputs to soil carbon). There are a few plausible explanations for this
trend, but the most likely explanation is that increasing temperatures
have increased rates of decomposition of soil organic matter, which has increased the flow of CO2. The length of carbon sequestering in soil is dependent on local climatic conditions and thus changes in the course of climate change.
Ocean
The ocean can be conceptually divided into a surface layer within which water makes frequent (daily to annual) contact with the atmosphere, and a deep layer below the typically mixed layer
depth of a few hundred meters or less, within which the time between
consecutive contacts may be centuries. The dissolved inorganic carbon
(DIC) in the surface layer is exchanged rapidly with the atmosphere,
maintaining equilibrium. Partly because its concentration of DIC is
about 15% higher
but mainly due to its larger volume, the deep ocean contains far more
carbon—it's the largest pool of actively cycled carbon in the world,
containing 50 times more than the atmosphere—but
the timescale to reach equilibrium with the atmosphere is hundreds of
years: the exchange of carbon between the two layers, driven by thermohaline circulation, is slow.
Carbon enters the ocean mainly through the dissolution of
atmospheric carbon dioxide, a small fraction of which is converted into carbonate. It can also enter the ocean through rivers as dissolved organic carbon. It is converted by organisms into organic carbon through photosynthesis
and can either be exchanged throughout the food chain or precipitated
into the ocean's deeper, more carbon-rich layers as dead soft tissue or
in shells as calcium carbonate.
It circulates in this layer for long periods of time before either
being deposited as sediment or, eventually, returned to the surface
waters through thermohaline circulation. Oceans are basic (~pH 8.2), hence CO2 acidification shifts the pH of the ocean towards neutral.
Oceanic absorption of CO2 is one of the most important forms of carbon sequestering limiting the human-caused rise of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. However, this process is limited by a number of factors. CO2 absorption makes water more acidic, which affects ocean biosystems. The projected rate of increasing oceanic acidity could slow the biological precipitation of calcium carbonates, thus decreasing the ocean's capacity to absorb carbon dioxide.
Earth's interior
The
geologic component of the carbon cycle operates slowly in comparison to
the other parts of the global carbon cycle. It is one of the most
important determinants of the amount of carbon in the atmosphere, and
thus of global temperatures.
Most of the earth's carbon is stored inertly in the earth's lithosphere. Much of the carbon stored in the earth's mantle was stored there when the earth formed. Some of it was deposited in the form of organic carbon from the biosphere. Of the carbon stored in the geosphere, about 80% is limestone and its derivatives, which form from the sedimentation of calcium carbonate stored in the shells of marine organisms. The remaining 20% is stored as kerogens
formed through the sedimentation and burial of terrestrial organisms
under high heat and pressure. Organic carbon stored in the geosphere can
remain there for millions of years.
Carbon can leave the geosphere in several ways. Carbon dioxide is released during the metamorphosis of carbonate rocks when they are subducted into the earth's mantle. This carbon dioxide can be released into the atmosphere and ocean through volcanoes and hotspots. It can also be removed by humans through the direct extraction of kerogens in the form of fossil fuels. After extraction, fossil fuels are burned to release energy, thus emitting the carbon they store into the atmosphere.
Human influence
Since the industrial revolution,
human activity has modified the carbon cycle by changing its
components' functions and directly adding carbon to the atmosphere.
The largest human impact on the carbon cycle is through direct emissions from burning fossil fuels,
which transfers carbon from the geosphere into the atmosphere. The rest
of this increase is caused mostly by changes in land-use, particularly deforestation.
Another direct human impact on the carbon cycle is the chemical process of calcination of limestone for clinker production, which releases CO2. Clinker is an industrial precursor of cement.
Humans also influence the carbon cycle indirectly by changing the terrestrial and oceanic biosphere. Over the past several centuries, direct and indirect human-caused land use and land cover change (LUCC) has led to the loss of biodiversity,
which lowers ecosystems' resilience to environmental stresses and
decreases their ability to remove carbon from the atmosphere. More
directly, it often leads to the release of carbon from terrestrial
ecosystems into the atmosphere. Deforestation
for agricultural purposes removes forests, which hold large amounts of
carbon, and replaces them, generally with agricultural or urban areas.
Both of these replacement land cover types store comparatively small
amounts of carbon so that the net product of the process is that more
carbon stays in the atmosphere.
Other human-caused changes to the environment change ecosystems'
productivity and their ability to remove carbon from the atmosphere. Air pollution, for example, damages plants and soils, while many agricultural and land use practices lead to higher erosion rates, washing carbon out of soils and decreasing plant productivity.
Humans also affect the oceanic carbon cycle. Current trends in climate change lead to higher ocean temperatures, thus modifying ecosystems.
Also, acid rain and polluted runoff from agriculture and industry
change the ocean's chemical composition. Such changes can have dramatic
effects on highly sensitive ecosystems such as coral reefs,
thus limiting the ocean's ability to absorb carbon from the atmosphere
on a regional scale and reducing oceanic biodiversity globally.
Arctic methane emissions
indirectly caused by anthropogenic global warming also affect the
carbon cycle and contribute to further warming in what is known as climate change feedback.
On 12 November 2015, NASA scientists reported that human-made carbon dioxide (CO2) continues to increase,
reaching levels not seen in hundreds of thousands of years: currently,
the rate carbon dioxide released by the burning of fossil fuels is about
double the net uptake by vegetation and the ocean.