Biogeochemical Cycles & Nutrient Cycling — UPSC Notes

Biogeochemical Cycles | Nutrient Cycling | Carbon, Nitrogen, Methane, Phosphorus, Sulphur | UPSC Notes | Legacy IAS Bangalore
UPSC Prelims · Environment & Ecology

Biogeochemical Cycles
Nutrient Cycling

Carbon · Nitrogen · Methane · Phosphorus · Sulphur — simplified with stories, memory tricks & PYQs

1

What is Biogeochemical / Nutrient Cycling?

Nature’s recycling system
Definition

A biogeochemical cycle (or nutrient cycle) is the pathway by which a chemical element or compound moves through the biotic (living) and abiotic (non-living) compartments of the Earth — atmosphere, hydrosphere, lithosphere, and biosphere — and back again. The word combines bio (living organisms), geo (Earth/rocks/soil), and chemical (elements involved).

🔑 Key Facts

  • Unlike energy (which flows in one direction and is lost as heat), nutrients are recycled indefinitely — they are never destroyed, only transformed.
  • The body of every living organism is made of C, H, O, N, P — these elements together make up 97% of all living matter.
  • Biogeochemical cycles are driven by biological processes (photosynthesis, respiration, decomposition), geological processes (weathering, erosion, volcanism), and human activities.

🔑 Two Types of Nutrient Cycles

  • Gaseous Cycles — Reservoir is the atmosphere. Fast cycles. Examples: Carbon cycle, Nitrogen cycle, Oxygen cycle, Methane cycle, Water cycle.
  • Sedimentary Cycles — Reservoir is the Earth’s crust (rocks/soil). Slow cycles — elements can be locked in rocks for millions of years. Examples: Phosphorus cycle, Sulphur cycle, Calcium cycle, Magnesium cycle.
🎯 Easy Memory

Gaseous = Sky is the reservoir (atmosphere). Elements move through air. Sedimentary = Rock is the reservoir (Earth’s crust). Elements move through soil and water. If a cycle has a major atmospheric phase → Gaseous. If it doesn’t → Sedimentary.

📌 UPSC Angle

The classification of cycles as gaseous vs sedimentary is a direct UPSC question. Know: Phosphorus cycle has NO atmospheric phase — it is purely sedimentary. Sulphur cycle is mostly sedimentary but has two gaseous compounds (H₂S and SO₂). Carbon and Nitrogen are gaseous. This distinction appears in statement-based UPSC questions.

2

Carbon Cycle

Gaseous cycle — CO₂ and the breath of life
Definition

The carbon cycle is the biogeochemical cycle by which carbon is exchanged among the atmosphere, oceans, soil, and living organisms. Carbon is the backbone of all organic molecules — it forms 49% of the dry weight of living organisms. The main atmospheric form is CO₂; the main stored form is organic carbon in biomass and fossil fuels.

🎯 Think of it Like This

Imagine carbon as a traveller with a passport that lets it enter any country — air, water, soil, rocks, and living bodies. Every living thing is made of carbon. When it dies, carbon returns to the soil or air. Plants pick it up again. The journey never stops.

🌫️ CO₂ in Atmosphere
🌿 Photosynthesis (Plants absorb CO₂)
🐄 Eaten by Animals (Food chain)
💀 Death & Decomposition
🌫️ CO₂ back to Atmosphere

🔑 Steps in the Carbon Cycle

  1. Photosynthesis (Atmosphere → Biosphere): Green plants absorb CO₂ from the atmosphere and convert it into organic compounds (glucose, starch, cellulose) using sunlight. This is the entry point of carbon into the food web. Removes CO₂ from air — plants are carbon sinks.
  2. Respiration (Biosphere → Atmosphere): All living organisms (plants, animals, microbes) break down organic compounds and release CO₂ back into the atmosphere during cellular respiration. Carbon exits the food web and returns to air.
  3. Decomposition (Dead matter → Soil/Atmosphere): When organisms die, decomposers (bacteria and fungi) break down their organic carbon into CO₂ (if aerobic) or methane CH₄ (if anaerobic — in swamps, marshes). Carbon returns to the atmosphere or soil.
  4. Ocean Exchange (Atmosphere ↔ Ocean): The ocean absorbs huge amounts of CO₂ from the atmosphere (oceans hold 71% of Earth’s total carbon). CO₂ dissolves in seawater and is used by marine organisms to form shells (calcium carbonate). The ocean is the largest carbon reservoir and carbon sink on Earth.
  5. Fossil Fuel Formation (Biosphere → Lithosphere): Over millions of years, dead organic matter buried under pressure transforms into coal, oil, and natural gas — locking carbon away in the Earth’s crust. This is long-term carbon storage.
  6. Combustion (Lithosphere → Atmosphere): Burning fossil fuels (coal, oil, gas), forests, and biomass releases stored carbon back into the atmosphere as CO₂ very rapidly. This is the primary driver of the current greenhouse effect and climate change.
  7. Volcanism: Volcanic eruptions release CO₂ stored in the Earth’s mantle into the atmosphere — a natural, long-term source of carbon.
💡 Why Carbon Cycle Matters for Climate Change

When humans burn fossil fuels, they release carbon that was locked away for millions of years — all at once. This rapidly increases atmospheric CO₂, enhancing the greenhouse effect and warming the planet. The ocean is absorbing extra CO₂ (becoming more acidic — ocean acidification) and forests are acting as carbon sinks. Deforestation removes these sinks, leaving more CO₂ in the air. Understanding the carbon cycle is essential for understanding climate policy.

⭐ Carbon Cycle — UPSC Must-Know Facts

  • 71% of all carbon on Earth is dissolved in the oceans — the ocean is the largest carbon reservoir.
  • Photosynthesis removes CO₂ from atmosphere (carbon sink). Respiration & combustion add CO₂ (carbon source).
  • Under anaerobic conditions (swamps, marshes), decomposition produces methane (CH₄) instead of CO₂.
  • Fossil fuels = ancient carbon locked in the lithosphere; burning them = releasing prehistoric carbon rapidly.
  • Carbon cycle type = Gaseous (reservoir = atmosphere + ocean).
📌 UPSC Angle

Carbon cycle is central to UPSC questions on climate change, greenhouse gases, carbon sinks, ocean acidification, and deforestation. Key statement tested: “The ocean is the largest carbon sink on Earth.” Also know: Forests = carbon sinks. Burning forests = double blow (releases stored carbon + removes the sink). Blue carbon = carbon stored in coastal ecosystems (mangroves, seagrasses, salt marshes) — a growing UPSC topic.

3

Nitrogen Cycle

Gaseous cycle — the most complex and most important for UPSC
Why Nitrogen Matters

Nitrogen makes up 78% of our atmosphere — it is the most abundant gas in air. But here’s the problem: plants and animals cannot use nitrogen in its gaseous form (N₂). The N₂ molecule has an extremely strong triple bond that most organisms cannot break. So nitrogen must be converted into usable forms — this is what the nitrogen cycle is all about.

🎯 The Big Picture Story — Read This First!

Imagine nitrogen gas (N₂) as raw iron ore — useful but unusable as-is. Bacteria are the “factories” that process it into steel (usable forms like NH₃ and NO₃⁻). Plants buy this steel to build proteins. Animals eat plants. Everything dies. Decomposers break it all back down to raw ore. Some bacteria return it to pure gas. The factory runs endlessly. Bacteria are the heroes of the nitrogen cycle.

The 5 Steps of the Nitrogen Cycle — Made Simple
N₂ → NH₃ / NH₄⁺ (Ammonia / Ammonium)

Step 1: Nitrogen Fixation

Atmospheric N₂ gas (unusable) is converted into ammonia (NH₃) or ammonium (NH₄⁺) — which plants can use. This “fixes” nitrogen into the soil.

How it happens — 3 ways:

  • Biological fixation (90%): Bacteria using the enzyme nitrogenase convert N₂ → NH₃.
    • Rhizobium — lives in root nodules of legumes (peas, beans, lentils). Symbiotic relationship — plant gives it sugars; bacteria gives it fixed nitrogen.
    • Azotobacter, Clostridium — free-living in soil. Fix nitrogen independently.
    • Cyanobacteria (Blue-Green Algae) — fix nitrogen in water and flooded rice paddies.
  • Atmospheric fixation by lightning: The energy of lightning breaks the N≡N triple bond, allowing nitrogen to combine with oxygen to form nitrogen oxides (NOₓ), which dissolve in rain and fall to soil as nitrates.
  • Industrial fixation (Haber-Bosch Process): N₂ + H₂ → NH₃. Used to make synthetic fertilizers. Human-made nitrogen fixation now equals or exceeds natural fixation globally.
🔬
NH₄⁺ → NO₂⁻ → NO₃⁻ (Nitrite → Nitrate)

Step 2: Nitrification

Ammonia/ammonium (NH₄⁺) in the soil is converted into nitrite (NO₂⁻) and then nitrate (NO₃⁻) by nitrifying bacteria. This is a 2-step process:

  • NH₄⁺ → NO₂⁻ by Nitrosomonas bacteria (aerobic — needs oxygen)
  • NO₂⁻ → NO₃⁻ by Nitrobacter bacteria (aerobic — needs oxygen)

Why does this matter? Nitrate (NO₃⁻) is the primary form in which plants absorb nitrogen through their roots. So nitrification makes nitrogen plant-available.

⚠️ Both bacteria are aerobic — they need well-aerated soil. Waterlogged soils have less nitrification.

🌿
NO₃⁻ / NH₄⁺ → Organic Nitrogen (Proteins, DNA)

Step 3: Assimilation

Plants absorb nitrate (NO₃⁻) and ammonium (NH₄⁺) from the soil through their roots and use these inorganic forms to build organic nitrogen compounds — proteins, amino acids, nucleic acids (DNA/RNA), and chlorophyll.

When animals eat plants, they obtain this organic nitrogen and use it to build their own proteins. This is how nitrogen enters the food web and travels from producers to consumers.

🌾 Legumes (dal, peas, soybean) are especially rich in protein because they have Rhizobium fixing nitrogen right at their roots — giving them a built-in nitrogen supply.

💀
Organic Nitrogen (proteins, urea, uric acid) → NH₃ / NH₄⁺

Step 4: Ammonification (Decomposition)

When plants and animals die, their organic nitrogen (proteins, urea, uric acid) is broken down by decomposers (bacteria and fungi) back into ammonia (NH₃) or ammonium (NH₄⁺). This is also called mineralisation.

Sources of organic nitrogen that undergo ammonification:

  • Dead plant and animal matter (proteins, amino acids)
  • Animal waste — urea (mammals), uric acid (birds, reptiles)
  • Sewage and manure

The ammonia produced is then available for nitrification (Step 2) or direct plant uptake — completing the loop.

💨
NO₃⁻ → N₂O → N₂ (back to atmosphere)

Step 5: Denitrification

Certain bacteria convert nitrate (NO₃⁻) back into nitrous oxide (N₂O) and finally into nitrogen gas (N₂), which escapes back into the atmosphere. This closes the cycle — returning nitrogen to where it started.

  • Done by Pseudomonas, Thiobacillus, Bacillus, Paracoccus denitrificans
  • Occurs in anaerobic conditions — waterlogged soils, swamps, deep in soil near water table
  • These bacteria use nitrate instead of oxygen for respiration when O₂ is absent

⚠️ Denitrification removes usable nitrogen from soil — this is why waterlogged or flooded soils become nitrogen-poor over time. But wetlands use this process to clean up excess nitrates from agricultural runoff.

⭐ Nitrogen Cycle — Memory Trick (FANNAD)

  • Fixation — N₂ → NH₃ (Rhizobium, Azotobacter, lightning)
  • Assimilation — Plants absorb NO₃⁻ / NH₄⁺ → make proteins
  • Nitrification — NH₄⁺ → NO₂⁻ (Nitrosomonas) → NO₃⁻ (Nitrobacter) [aerobic]
  • Nitrification … done ✓
  • Ammonification — Dead matter / urea → NH₃ (bacteria & fungi)
  • Denitrification — NO₃⁻ → N₂O → N₂ (Pseudomonas) [anaerobic]

Bacteria cheat sheet: Rhizobium (root nodules, legumes) · Azotobacter (free in soil) · Nitrosomonas (NH₄⁺ → NO₂⁻) · Nitrobacter (NO₂⁻ → NO₃⁻) · Pseudomonas (NO₃⁻ → N₂)

💡 Why Legumes Improve Soil Fertility

When farmers grow dal, peas, or soybean, the Rhizobium bacteria in their root nodules fix atmospheric nitrogen into the soil. After harvest, the roots are left in the field — they decompose and release this fixed nitrogen, enriching the soil for the next crop. This is why traditional Indian farming always rotated between cereal crops and legume crops — it was a natural fertilization system. UPSC has connected this to sustainable agriculture and the Green Revolution.

💡 Human Disruptions of the Nitrogen Cycle

Excess fertilizer use: Synthetic nitrogen fertilizers (urea, ammonium nitrate) from the Haber-Bosch process add far more fixed nitrogen to soil than natural cycles. This nitrogen washes into rivers and lakes → causing eutrophication (algal blooms, oxygen depletion, dead zones).

Acid rain: Burning fossil fuels releases nitrogen oxides (NOₓ) into the atmosphere. These react with water to form nitric acid (HNO₃) — causing acid rain, which damages forests, kills aquatic life, and corrodes buildings.

N₂O as greenhouse gas: Denitrification in agricultural soils releases nitrous oxide (N₂O), which is ~300 times more potent as a greenhouse gas than CO₂ over 100 years.

📌 UPSC Angle — High Priority

The nitrogen cycle is among the most tested ecology topics in UPSC. Know: (1) Rhizobium fixes nitrogen in root nodules of legumes — tested directly. (2) Nitrification requires aerobic (oxygenated) conditions; denitrification requires anaerobic conditions. (3) Nitrosomonas converts NH₄⁺ → NO₂⁻; Nitrobacter converts NO₂⁻ → NO₃⁻. (4) Excess nitrogen → eutrophication. (5) Burning fossil fuels → NOₓ → acid rain. (6) N₂O is a potent greenhouse gas. (7) The legume-Rhizobium relationship is a classic example of mutualism.

4

Methane (CH₄) Cycle

Compound gaseous cycle — 2nd most important greenhouse gas
Definition

Methane (CH₄) is the simplest hydrocarbon and the second most important greenhouse gas after CO₂ in terms of its contribution to climate change. It is produced when organic matter decomposes in the absence of oxygen (anaerobic decomposition) by methanogenic archaea (microbes). Methane is about 80 times more potent than CO₂ as a greenhouse gas over a 20-year period (and ~25-28 times over 100 years).

🎯 Simple Way to Remember Methane Sources

Any place that is wet, warm, and oxygen-free produces methane — because anaerobic decomposition happens there. Cow stomachs, rice paddies, swamps, landfills — all wet and oxygen-poor inside. Think: “Wet + Airless = Methane.”

🌿 Natural Sources of Methane

  • Wetlands — the largest natural source. Anaerobic decomposition in waterlogged soil by methanogens.
  • Termites — gut bacteria of termites produce methane while digesting wood.
  • Ocean sediments — methane hydrates (frozen methane) in deep ocean and permafrost.
  • Wild ruminants — wild buffaloes, wildebeest (enteric fermentation).
  • Wildfires — incomplete combustion of biomass.
  • Volcanic activity — minor source from degassing.

🏭 Human (Anthropogenic) Sources

  • Rice paddies (paddy cultivation) — flooded fields create anaerobic conditions; among the largest agricultural sources.
  • Livestock — cattle, buffalo, sheep, goats produce methane through enteric fermentation (digestion in stomach). Also from manure.
  • Landfills — decomposing organic waste in garbage dumps produces methane (biogas).
  • Coal mining — methane trapped in coal seams is released when coal is mined.
  • Natural gas and oil production — leakage during extraction, processing, and transport.
  • Biomass burning — incomplete burning of wood, crop residues, forests.
  • Sewage treatment plants — anaerobic digestion of organic waste.

🔑 Methane Sinks — Where Methane Goes

  • Reaction with hydroxyl radicals (OH⁻) in troposphere (main sink): About 90% of methane is destroyed by reacting with OH radicals in the lower atmosphere. CH₄ + OH → CO₂ + H₂O. This is the primary removal mechanism.
  • Soil uptake (methanotrophs): Certain aerobic bacteria in well-drained soils (methanotrophs) consume methane as their energy source, converting it to CO₂. Well-aerated forest soils are important methane sinks.
  • Stratospheric oxidation: A small amount of methane that reaches the stratosphere is oxidized by photochemical reactions.

⭐ Methane — UPSC Must-Know Facts

  • Methane is produced by methanogenic archaea under anaerobic conditions.
  • Wetlands = largest natural methane source. Rice paddies = largest agricultural methane source.
  • Methane is 25–28× more potent than CO₂ as a GHG over 100 years; ~80× over 20 years.
  • Main methane sink = reaction with OH radicals in troposphere.
  • Melting permafrost is releasing massive stored methane — a climate tipping point.
  • Biogas (from cattle dung, kitchen waste) is mostly methane — used as a renewable fuel.
📌 UPSC Angle

Methane sources are tested regularly in UPSC — especially distinguishing natural from anthropogenic sources. Rice paddies as a methane source is a classic UPSC question. Permafrost methane release as a climate feedback loop is relevant to current affairs. Also know: Wetlands are both methane sources (anaerobic decomposition) AND carbon sinks (peat formation) — this paradox is a favourite UPSC trap. Methane from landfills can be captured and used as fuel — relevant to Swachh Bharat and waste management questions.

5

Phosphorus Cycle

Sedimentary cycle — no atmosphere, only rock, soil & water
Definition

The phosphorus cycle is a sedimentary biogeochemical cycle. Unlike carbon and nitrogen, phosphorus has no significant atmospheric phase — it does not exist as a gas under normal conditions. Its reservoir is phosphate rocks (apatite minerals) in the Earth’s crust. It moves slowly through soil, water, and living organisms. The phosphorus cycle is the slowest of all major nutrient cycles.

🎯 Why Phosphorus Matters

Phosphorus is essential for DNA, RNA, ATP (energy currency of cells), and cell membranes (phospholipids). Without phosphorus, no cell can store or use energy. It is also a building block of bones and teeth. Yet it is scarce — which is why it limits plant growth in many ecosystems. Phosphorus in fertilizers is mined from ancient phosphate rock — a non-renewable resource.

🪨 Phosphate Rocks (Weathering)
🌍 Soil (PO₄³⁻ ions)
🌿 Plants absorb via roots
🐄 Animals eat plants
💀 Death & Decomposition
🌊 Runoff to Ocean → Sediment → Rock

🔑 Steps in the Phosphorus Cycle

  1. Weathering of rocks: Phosphate rocks (mainly apatite — Ca₅(PO₄)₃) are slowly broken down by weathering (rain, temperature, acids). This releases phosphate ions (PO₄³⁻) into the soil and water. This is the entry point — extremely slow (millions of years).
  2. Soil uptake by plants: Plants absorb inorganic phosphate ions (PO₄³⁻ and HPO₄²⁻) through their roots from soil water. Mycorrhizal fungi help plants access phosphorus from the soil more efficiently.
  3. Movement through food chain: Animals eat plants and obtain phosphorus. It is incorporated into bones, teeth, DNA, ATP, and cell membranes at each level.
  4. Decomposition (return to soil): When plants and animals die, decomposers (phosphate-solubilising bacteria and fungi) break down organic phosphorus back into inorganic phosphate ions, returning it to the soil.
  5. Runoff to oceans: Phosphate ions dissolved in water are carried by rivers into the oceans. Marine organisms use them; when they die, phosphorus settles on the ocean floor as sediment.
  6. Geological uplift: Over millions of years, tectonic activity lifts ocean sediments containing phosphate onto land, where weathering begins the cycle again. This is the slowest step — taking tens of millions of years.
💡 Guano — Nature’s Phosphorus Express

Marine birds (seabirds like cormorants, gannets) eat fish from the ocean, absorb phosphorus from them, and deposit it on land as guano (bird droppings). This is one of the fastest pathways for returning ocean phosphorus to land. Guano deposits were historically one of the world’s most valuable fertilizers — wars were fought over guano islands in the 19th century!

💡 Phosphorus & Eutrophication

Excess phosphorus from fertilizer runoff and sewage enters lakes and rivers. This triggers explosive growth of algae and phytoplankton — called eutrophication. The algal bloom blocks sunlight, kills underwater plants, and when algae die, their decomposition consumes all dissolved oxygen, creating dead zones where no aquatic life can survive. This is why phosphorus in detergents was banned in many countries — even a little phosphorus causes a lot of damage in water bodies.

⭐ Phosphorus — UPSC Must-Know Facts

  • No atmospheric phase — purely sedimentary. Phosphorus does NOT exist as a gas. ✅
  • Reservoir = phosphate rocks (apatite minerals) in Earth’s crust.
  • Essential for DNA, RNA, ATP, cell membranes, bones, teeth.
  • Phosphorus cycle is the slowest of all biogeochemical cycles.
  • Excess phosphorus in water → eutrophication → algal blooms → dead zones.
  • Mycorrhizal fungi help plants absorb phosphorus from soil.
  • Phosphate rock is a non-renewable resource — being mined faster than it forms.
📌 UPSC Angle

The key UPSC fact: Phosphorus cycle has no atmospheric phase — this is the most tested statement about this cycle. Also: excess phosphorus → eutrophication (linked to water pollution questions). Mycorrhizae and phosphorus absorption is relevant to soil ecology. “Soil does not play any role in the phosphorus cycle” — this is a FALSE statement that has appeared in UPSC as a trap.

6

Sulphur Cycle

Mostly sedimentary — but with a gaseous component (H₂S and SO₂)
Definition

The sulphur cycle is the biogeochemical cycle that describes the movement of sulphur through the Earth’s lithosphere, atmosphere, hydrosphere, and biosphere. Sulphur is essential for life — it is a component of amino acids (cysteine, methionine), proteins, vitamins (biotin, thiamine), and enzymes. The sulphur cycle is mostly sedimentary, but unlike phosphorus, it has an important gaseous phase through two compounds: hydrogen sulphide (H₂S) and sulphur dioxide (SO₂).

🎯 Why Sulphur Matters

Sulphur is what gives rotten eggs their smell (H₂S), what causes volcanoes to produce choking fumes (SO₂), and what makes acid rain kill forests and corrode buildings. Understanding the sulphur cycle is essential for understanding acid rain — one of the most tested UPSC topics in environment.

🔑 Reservoir of Sulphur

  • The main reservoir is soil and sediments — sulphur is stored here as sulphates, sulphides, and organic sulphur.
  • In organic deposits: coal, oil, peat (as organic sulphur).
  • In inorganic deposits: pyrite rock (FeS₂) and sulphur rock — a major geological reservoir.
  • Sulphate (SO₄²⁻) dissolved in seawater is also a major reservoir.

🔑 Steps in the Sulphur Cycle

  1. Weathering of rocks (release to soil): Sulphur-containing rocks (pyrite — FeS₂, gypsum — CaSO₄) are broken down by weathering, releasing sulphate ions (SO₄²⁻) into the soil and water. Erosional runoff carries dissolved sulphates to rivers and oceans.
  2. Absorption by plants: Plants absorb sulphate (SO₄²⁻) from the soil through their roots. Sulphate is reduced inside the plant and incorporated into organic molecules — especially amino acids like cysteine and methionine.
  3. Movement through food chain: Animals obtain sulphur by eating plants. Sulphur is found in the proteins of all animals — in hair, hooves, feathers, and muscles.
  4. Decomposition (release as H₂S): When organisms die, bacteria decompose the organic sulphur in proteins, releasing hydrogen sulphide (H₂S) gas — the “rotten egg” smell. Under anaerobic conditions, sulphate-reducing bacteria convert sulphates to H₂S.
  5. Atmospheric release (SO₂ and H₂S):
    • Volcanic eruptions — inject large amounts of SO₂ into the atmosphere.
    • Burning fossil fuels (coal, diesel, petroleum) — coal contains sulphur; burning releases SO₂. This is the primary human source of atmospheric sulphur.
    • Ocean surface — marine organisms release dimethyl sulphide (DMS), a sulphur compound that contributes to cloud formation.
  6. Acid rain formation: SO₂ in the atmosphere reacts with water vapour and oxygen to form sulphuric acid (H₂SO₄). This falls as acid rain (pH < 5.6), damaging forests, aquatic ecosystems, soil, and buildings.
  7. Return to soil: Acid rain and dry deposition return sulphate to the soil and water bodies, completing the cycle.
💡 Acid Rain — The Sulphur Cycle in Action

When a coal-fired power plant burns coal, it releases SO₂ into the atmosphere. SO₂ + H₂O + O₂ → H₂SO₄ (sulphuric acid). This dissolves in rain, lowering its pH to 4 or below. When this acid rain falls on forests, it leaches calcium and magnesium from the soil (nutrients trees need), damages leaf coatings, and kills fish in lakes by acidifying the water. The Black Forest in Germany was severely damaged by acid rain from industrial Europe in the 1970s–80s. In India, coal-rich Jharkhand and Odisha have been affected. Reducing SO₂ emissions from power plants is one of the key goals of the Clean Air Action Plan.

⭐ Sulphur Cycle — UPSC Must-Know Facts

  • Sulphur cycle is mostly sedimentary, but has gaseous compounds: H₂S (rotten egg gas) and SO₂ (from volcanoes & fossil fuel burning).
  • Main reservoir = soil and sediments (pyrite, gypsum, coal, organic matter).
  • Burning coal and diesel = biggest human source of atmospheric SO₂ → acid rain.
  • SO₂ + H₂O + O₂ → H₂SO₄ (sulphuric acid) = acid rain.
  • Sulphur is essential in amino acids cysteine and methionine.
  • Marine organisms (phytoplankton) release dimethyl sulphide (DMS) — important for cloud formation.
  • “Soil does not play any role in the sulphur cycle” — FALSE (soil IS a major reservoir). UPSC has tested this exact statement.
📌 UPSC Angle

The sulphur cycle is most frequently tested through the lens of acid rain. Know: SO₂ from coal burning → H₂SO₄ → acid rain. Also: NOₓ from vehicles and power plants → HNO₃ → also contributes to acid rain. The statement “Burning coal releases CO₂, SO₂, and oxides of nitrogen” has been asked directly in UPSC (2014). Also remember: Irrigation over a long period can contribute to soil salinization by depositing sulphates from groundwater — a tested UPSC connection between the sulphur cycle and agriculture.


Master Comparison Table

All 5 cycles at a glance
FeatureCarbonNitrogenMethanePhosphorusSulphur
TypeGaseousGaseousGaseous (compound)SedimentaryMostly Sedimentary (with gaseous phase)
ReservoirAtmosphere + OceanAtmosphere (78% N₂)Atmosphere + WetlandsPhosphate rocks (Earth’s crust)Soil & sediments (pyrite, coal)
Atmospheric formCO₂, CH₄N₂, N₂O, NOₓCH₄None (no gas phase)H₂S, SO₂ (minor phase)
Key process inPhotosynthesis, Respiration, CombustionFixation, Nitrification, DenitrificationAnaerobic decompositionWeathering, Decomposition, RunoffWeathering, Burning fossil fuels, Decomposition
Key bacteriaDecomposers (general)Rhizobium, Nitrosomonas, Nitrobacter, PseudomonasMethanogenic archaeaPhosphate-solubilising bacteria, MycorrhizaeSulphate-reducing bacteria, Desulfovibrio
Human impactFossil fuel burning → CO₂ → climate changeFertilizers → eutrophication, N₂O (GHG), acid rain (NOₓ)Rice paddies, cattle → methane → climate changeFertilizer runoff → eutrophicationCoal burning → SO₂ → acid rain
Essential for life?Yes — backbone of all organic moleculesYes — proteins, DNA, chlorophyllGreenhouse gas (not essential for life)Yes — DNA, ATP, bones, cell membranesYes — amino acids (cysteine, methionine)
Speed of cycleFast (atmosphere days–years)Fast (days–years)Fast (10–12 years atmospheric life)Very slow (millions of years for geological phase)Slow (sedimentary) but fast (atmospheric SO₂)

🧪 Practice MCQs — Test Yourself
Practice
Q1. Which of the following nutrient cycles has NO atmospheric phase?
✅ Answer: (c) Phosphorus cycle
Phosphorus does NOT exist as a gas under normal conditions — it has NO atmospheric phase. Its main reservoir is phosphate rocks in the Earth’s crust, making it a purely sedimentary cycle. The Carbon cycle has CO₂ and CH₄ in the atmosphere. The Nitrogen cycle has N₂ (78% of atmosphere). The Sulphur cycle has gaseous H₂S and SO₂. Only phosphorus has no gas form. This is the most tested fact about the phosphorus cycle in UPSC.
Practice
Q2. In the nitrogen cycle, which bacteria converts ammonium (NH₄⁺) to nitrite (NO₂⁻)?
✅ Answer: (b) Nitrosomonas
Nitrification is a two-step process: Step 1 — Nitrosomonas converts NH₄⁺ → NO₂⁻ (nitrite). Step 2 — Nitrobacter converts NO₂⁻ → NO₃⁻ (nitrate). Both are aerobic bacteria. Pseudomonas is a denitrifying bacterium (NO₃⁻ → N₂). Rhizobium is a nitrogen-fixing bacterium in legume root nodules (N₂ → NH₃). Memory trick: Nitrosomonas → source of NO₂⁻ (the first nitrite). Nitrobacter → produces the better form (NO₃⁻ / nitrate).
Practice
Q3. Consider the following statements about the Nitrogen Cycle: 1. Nitrogen fixation by Rhizobium occurs in root nodules of leguminous plants. 2. Denitrification is carried out in aerobic (oxygen-rich) conditions. 3. Nitrification converts ammonia into nitrates. 4. Ammonification converts organic nitrogen into ammonia. Which of the above statements are correct?
✅ Answer: (c) — 1, 3 and 4 only
1 ✅ Correct: Rhizobium lives in root nodules of legumes and fixes N₂ → NH₃. Classic mutualism. 2 ❌ Wrong: Denitrification occurs in ANAEROBIC (oxygen-poor) conditions — in waterlogged soils, swamps, and deep soil. Denitrifying bacteria (Pseudomonas) use nitrate instead of oxygen for respiration when O₂ is absent. 3 ✅ Correct: Nitrification converts NH₄⁺ → NO₂⁻ (by Nitrosomonas) → NO₃⁻ (by Nitrobacter) — so yes, ammonia is ultimately converted to nitrate. 4 ✅ Correct: Ammonification is when bacteria/fungi decompose dead organic matter and convert organic nitrogen (proteins, urea) back into ammonia/ammonium.
Practice
Q4. Which of the following is the LARGEST natural source of methane emissions?
✅ Answer: (c) Wetlands
Wetlands are the largest NATURAL source of methane. Waterlogged anaerobic conditions in wetlands support large populations of methanogenic archaea that decompose organic matter and release CH₄. Among HUMAN (anthropogenic) sources, livestock/cattle are one of the largest sources (enteric fermentation). Rice paddies are a major anthropogenic source too — but wetlands dominate the natural category. Total natural sources (wetlands, termites, ocean) exceed individual anthropogenic sources, though total human sources collectively are very large. Key distinction: Natural largest = Wetlands; Agricultural largest = Rice paddies + Livestock.
Practice
Q5. Acid rain is primarily caused by the atmospheric presence of:
✅ Answer: (c) SO₂ and NOₓ
Acid rain (pH < 5.6) is caused by two atmospheric pollutants: (1) SO₂ (sulphur dioxide) — primarily from burning coal and oil. SO₂ + H₂O + O₂ → H₂SO₄ (sulphuric acid) = the main contributor to acid rain. (2) NOₓ (nitrogen oxides) — from vehicle exhausts, power plants, and forest fires. NOₓ + H₂O → HNO₃ (nitric acid). Together, sulphuric acid and nitric acid make up acid rain. CO₂ and methane cause greenhouse warming, not acid rain. CFC causes ozone depletion. This is a very frequently tested UPSC fact.
Practice
Q6. Consider the following: Excess nitrogen and phosphorus from agricultural runoff enter water bodies. What is the direct consequence?
✅ Answer: (c) Eutrophication
When excess nitrogen (NO₃⁻) and phosphorus (PO₄³⁻) from fertilizers and sewage enter lakes and rivers, they act as nutrients for algae and phytoplankton. This causes explosive algal growth — algal blooms. The algae block sunlight from reaching underwater plants. When algae die, their decomposition by bacteria uses up all dissolved oxygen in the water — creating hypoxic “dead zones” where fish and other aquatic life cannot survive. This is eutrophication. It is directly caused by excess nutrients (nitrogen + phosphorus) — directly related to both nutrient cycles. Acid rain is caused by SO₂/NOₓ in the atmosphere, not by water runoff.
Practice
Q7. Which of the following correctly describes the Haber-Bosch Process in the context of the Nitrogen Cycle?
✅ Answer: (c)
The Haber-Bosch Process is the industrial method of nitrogen fixation: N₂ + 3H₂ → 2NH₃ (under high temperature, high pressure, iron catalyst). It was developed by Fritz Haber and Carl Bosch in the early 20th century and enabled mass production of synthetic fertilizers — revolutionising agriculture (Green Revolution). Today, human industrial nitrogen fixation through Haber-Bosch equals or EXCEEDS all natural biological nitrogen fixation on Earth — massively altering the nitrogen cycle and contributing to eutrophication and N₂O emissions. Option (d) describes denitrification. Option (b) describes nitrification. Option (a) describes atmospheric fixation by lightning.
📜 UPSC Prelims PYQs — Official Past Questions
PYQUPSC 2015
Acid rain is caused by the pollution of environment by: a) Carbon dioxide and nitrogen b) Carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide c) Ozone and carbon dioxide d) Nitrous oxide and sulphur dioxide
✅ Official Answer: (d) Nitrous oxide and sulphur dioxide
Acid rain is caused by SO₂ (sulphur dioxide, from burning coal and oil) and NOₓ/nitrogen oxides (including nitrous oxide — from vehicles, power plants, agriculture). These react with atmospheric moisture: SO₂ + H₂O → H₂SO₄ (sulphuric acid); NOₓ + H₂O → HNO₃ (nitric acid). These acids lower rain pH below 5.6. CO₂ does make rain slightly acidic naturally (carbonic acid, pH ~5.6), but this is considered normal, not “acid rain.” CO, ozone, and regular nitrogen gas do NOT cause acid rain.
PYQUPSC 2013
Consider the following statements: 1. Burning coal releases CO, CO₂, sulphur dioxide and oxides of nitrogen. 2. Proliferation of nitrogen-fixing microorganisms in soil can occur after addition of sulphur to soil. 3. Increase in the acidity of soil can take place with excess nitrogen. Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
✅ Official Answer: (d) 1, 2 and 3
Statement 1 ✅: Burning coal releases CO (incomplete combustion), CO₂ (complete combustion), SO₂ (sulphur in coal), and NOₓ (nitrogen in coal and from N₂ in air at high temperatures). Statement 2 ✅: Adding sulphur to soil can lower soil pH (sulphur → sulphuric acid when oxidised by bacteria). This acidic, nutrient-modified environment can promote growth of nitrogen-fixing microorganisms. Statement 3 ✅: Excess nitrogen (from fertilizers) increases nitrification → produces hydrogen ions (H⁺) → increases soil acidity. This is why overuse of ammonium-based fertilizers acidifies soil.
PYQUPSC 2019
Consider the following statements: 1. Soil does not play any role in the sulphur cycle. 2. Irrigation over a period of time can contribute to the salinization of some agricultural lands. Which of the above statements is/are correct?
✅ Official Answer: (b) 2 only
Statement 1 ❌ Wrong: Soil plays a MAJOR role in the sulphur cycle. The main reservoir of sulphur is in soil and sediments (as sulphates, sulphides, pyrite rock). Sulphur is released from soil by weathering and decomposition. Plants absorb sulphates from soil. Soil is central to the sulphur cycle — saying it has no role is completely false. Statement 2 ✅ Correct: Long-term irrigation brings groundwater (which contains dissolved sulphates and salts) to the surface. As water evaporates, salts accumulate in topsoil — causing salinization. This is a well-documented agricultural problem in arid regions.
PYQUPSC 2022
With reference to carbon nanotubes, consider the following statements: 1. They can be used as carriers of drugs and antigens in the human body. 2. They can be made into artificial blood capillaries for an injured part of the human body. 3. They can be used in biochemical sensors. 4. Carbon nanotubes are biodegradable. Which of the statements given above are correct?
✅ Official Answer: (b) 1, 2 and 3 only
This connects to the carbon cycle — carbon’s unique bonding forms nanotubes. 1 ✅: Carbon nanotubes can encapsulate drug molecules and antigens for targeted delivery. 2 ✅: Their cylindrical hollow structure and biocompatibility make them suitable for artificial blood capillaries. 3 ✅: Their electrical conductivity makes them ideal for biosensors that detect chemical signals. 4 ❌ Wrong: Carbon nanotubes are NOT biodegradable — they are highly stable carbon structures that persist in the environment, raising environmental and health concerns. This is why their disposal is a concern in nanotechnology policy.
PYQUPSC 2021
Among the following crops, which one is the most important anthropogenic source of both methane and nitrous oxide?
✅ Official Answer: (b) Rice
Rice (paddy cultivation) is the most important agricultural source of BOTH greenhouse gases: (1) Methane (CH₄): Flooded paddy fields create anaerobic conditions where methanogenic archaea decompose organic matter, releasing CH₄. Rice paddies are among the largest agricultural CH₄ sources globally. (2) Nitrous oxide (N₂O): Nitrogen fertilizers used in rice cultivation are converted to N₂O by soil bacteria during denitrification (in flooded soils) and nitrification (as soils dry). N₂O is ~300× more potent than CO₂ as a greenhouse gas. No other single crop generates such large amounts of both CH₄ and N₂O. This PYQ directly links the methane cycle and nitrogen cycle.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Gaseous cycles have the atmosphere as their main reservoir — the element moves primarily through air. They are faster cycles. Examples: Carbon (CO₂), Nitrogen (N₂), Oxygen, Methane (CH₄), Water cycle. Sedimentary cycles have the Earth’s crust (rocks and soil) as their main reservoir — the element moves primarily through soil and water. They are much slower — elements can be locked in rocks for millions of years. Examples: Phosphorus, Sulphur (mostly), Calcium, Magnesium. Key rule: If the element has a significant atmospheric form → Gaseous. If it doesn’t → Sedimentary.
Nitrogen gas (N₂) has an extremely strong triple covalent bond (N≡N) between the two nitrogen atoms. This bond requires a huge amount of energy to break. Plants and most organisms do not have the biological machinery (enzyme) to break this bond. They can only absorb nitrogen in the form of ammonium (NH₄⁺) or nitrate (NO₃⁻) from the soil. Special bacteria (like Rhizobium, Azotobacter, cyanobacteria) have the enzyme nitrogenase that can break the N≡N bond and “fix” N₂ into NH₃ — making it accessible to plants. This is why these bacteria are so critical for agriculture and ecosystems.
Rhizobium is a nitrogen-fixing bacterium that lives in the root nodules of leguminous plants (pulses/dal, peas, soybeans, clover, groundnut). It has a mutualistic/symbiotic relationship with the plant: the plant provides Rhizobium with carbohydrates (energy from photosynthesis), and Rhizobium provides the plant with fixed nitrogen (NH₃/NH₄⁺) that it cannot obtain from the atmosphere directly. Rhizobium uses the enzyme nitrogenase to convert atmospheric N₂ → NH₃. This fixed nitrogen is then used by the plant to make proteins, chlorophyll, and DNA. This is why legumes enrich the soil and are used in crop rotation — after the legume crop is harvested, the nitrogen-rich root nodules remain in soil, benefiting the next crop.
Eutrophication is the excessive enrichment of a water body with nutrients — primarily nitrogen (NO₃⁻) and phosphorus (PO₄³⁻) — causing explosive growth of algae and phytoplankton (algal bloom). When excess fertilizers from farms are washed by rain into rivers and lakes, they carry nitrogen and phosphorus from the nitrogen and phosphorus cycles into the water. The algal bloom blocks sunlight for underwater plants. When the algae die, their decomposition by bacteria consumes ALL dissolved oxygen, creating a dead zone where fish, molluscs, and other aquatic life suffocate and die. Eutrophication is one of the most serious freshwater pollution problems globally. Prevention: Reducing fertilizer use, treating sewage, banning phosphate detergents.
The phosphorus cycle is the slowest because it has no atmospheric phase. The main reservoir of phosphorus is in phosphate rocks (apatite minerals) that were formed millions of years ago. For phosphorus to become available to living organisms, these rocks must first be weathered — a process that takes thousands to millions of years. Once phosphorus reaches the ocean as dissolved phosphate, it settles on the ocean floor as sediment. For this sediment to return to land, tectonic uplift must occur — which takes tens of millions of years. In contrast, carbon and nitrogen cycle through the atmosphere quickly (days to years). Phosphorus has no “shortcut” through the atmosphere — every gram must travel the long geological route.
Wetlands are natural water purification systems. When nitrate-rich agricultural runoff (from fertilizer use) flows into wetlands, the anaerobic conditions in waterlogged wetland soils activate denitrifying bacteria (like Pseudomonas). These bacteria convert excess nitrate (NO₃⁻) from the water into harmless nitrogen gas (N₂) that escapes into the atmosphere. This removes excess nitrogen from the water before it reaches rivers and lakes — preventing eutrophication downstream. Wetlands thus act as natural nitrogen filters, protecting freshwater bodies. This ecosystem service (water purification) is one of the key reasons why conserving wetlands is so important — and a frequently tested UPSC connection between ecology and environmental policy.
Nitrification = the conversion of ammonium (NH₄⁺) to nitrite (NO₂⁻) and then to nitrate (NO₃⁻) by aerobic bacteria. This adds usable nitrogen forms to the soil for plants. Happens in well-aerated, oxygen-rich soils. Bacteria: Nitrosomonas (NH₄⁺ → NO₂⁻) then Nitrobacter (NO₂⁻ → NO₃⁻). Direction: NH₄⁺ → NO₃⁻ (building up towards nitrate). Denitrification = the conversion of nitrate (NO₃⁻) back into nitrogen gas (N₂) by anaerobic bacteria. This removes fixed nitrogen from the soil and returns it to the atmosphere. Happens in waterlogged, oxygen-poor soils. Bacteria: Pseudomonas, Thiobacillus. Direction: NO₃⁻ → N₂ (breaking down back to gas). One builds up nitrogen availability; the other removes it — they are opposite processes.
Human activities have significantly disrupted all major biogeochemical cycles: Carbon cycle: Burning fossil fuels adds billions of tonnes of CO₂ to the atmosphere; deforestation removes carbon sinks → climate change. Nitrogen cycle: Synthetic fertilizers (Haber-Bosch) add more fixed nitrogen than natural processes → eutrophication of water bodies; NOₓ emissions → acid rain; N₂O from agriculture → greenhouse gas. Phosphorus cycle: Mining phosphate rock for fertilizers depletes a non-renewable resource; fertilizer runoff → eutrophication. Sulphur cycle: Burning coal and oil → SO₂ emissions → acid rain → damage to forests, lakes, and buildings. Methane cycle: Rice cultivation, cattle farming, landfills, and gas extraction → increased atmospheric methane → accelerated climate change.
Blue carbon refers to carbon stored in coastal and marine ecosystems — primarily mangroves, seagrass meadows, and salt marshes. These ecosystems are extremely efficient carbon sinks: they store carbon in their plant biomass AND in the waterlogged sediments below them, where decomposition is very slow. Per unit area, mangroves and seagrasses can store up to 5 times more carbon than tropical rainforests. When these coastal ecosystems are destroyed (for shrimp farming, coastal development), the stored carbon is released as CO₂ — contributing significantly to climate change. Protecting and restoring blue carbon ecosystems is now a key nature-based climate solution. This is a growing UPSC current affairs topic, relevant to India’s coastal policies and NDC targets under the Paris Agreement.
Legacy IAS — UPSC Civil Services Coaching, Bangalore  |  Content prepared exclusively for UPSC aspirants. All facts verified against NCERT, standard ecology sources, and UPSC PYQ analysis.

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