~— we f. ‘1 “ad Jee, sols clusaad aitiMRehBASice tmaech sadnUra te in marine waters may exert a limiting vofeetupon phytoplankton production, and defi- OLOGY RON AND COBALT IN EC ciencies of cobalt or copper in pasture lands may produce anemia (wasting disease) in grazing stock F.C. LOWMAN! Hiologs. Lavoretors of Radiation le, Fashington Caseevets of B ashington. Seatt ia ationships between organ isms and - be iaterrel p ir eavironseats are usually assumed to bensreci un~ the environsent controls the conditio ; organisms, in rowhich tbe orgaoisms exist and the ronment. say influence the state of the envi envithe upon The effects of tbe organisms c the reciprorepent arc usually wore subtle than result of ‘the te) reiationship, primarily as a latively small total mass of the organisms, ever,one of the salient characteristics of the dosphere is its chemical reactivity and, although generation of organisms may produce an almost Badetectable alteration, significant changes in fee environment may be brought about by the organms over a period of many generations. On the other hand, many effects of the en- : ronment upon the organisms are easily observed ecause they are usually effective during the Mfetine of any one organism and may be detected reasonable period of observation, wring a The dominant environmental factors often pro@ immediate effects upon the organism that are mmetimes considered to be of the greatest impor- @lance, However, Within the environment, some Shysical factors may cause minor changes which “ire cumulative over a long period of time, result‘fing in greatly altered environmental conditions “from those which would have existed had these “Processes not been in operation. = The environment is the result of the inter- “Slay between matter and energy, In the material ‘@base of the environment, low availability of a ‘Riven chemical element may exert a limiting effect pon local organisms, Thus, a low level of 2 ble 1. solution. Atnosphere (grams per 100 grams) = SRlement my drogen 53.0 Be lium joron {larbon gnesium Beever Bum enun en MEP Ot aan tun a tetun Aa aces @eaca, Iron and, to a lesser degree, cobalt are elements which have exerted primary and secondary effects upon the environments, and thus upon the organisms, Some of these mechanisms have extended back to times earlier than the origin of the biosphere, The roles of iron and cobalt in ecosystems ~ are primarily dependent upon their availabilities to the organisms, The availability of these elements is determined by their distribution and chemical forms in the lithosphere and hydrosphere. the present elemental composition of these environmental spheres has been determined by: (a) the amounts of individual elements produced by the reactions which formed the original material of the earth, (b) fractionation which oc-curred early in the formation of the earth, and (c) fractionation which has occurred and is occurring as the result of geochemical processes. In Table 1 are shown the abundances of sevy~ eral elements in the solar atmosphere, the total earth (grams per 100 grams) 0.14 0.00000003 0.0003 0.03 Sea water“ (grama per 100 grams) 0 .0000000005 0.0005 0.003 0.005 46.6 2.8 oe nos 2.7 he "T0036" 0181 3.6 004 -00086 167 0.09 35.0 0.10 5.0 0,0000002 0.000001 .043 17.0 -0031 0.: . 0.014 + + -00034 ‘0029 Pettis - 00021 . Mason, ‘ + 0.20 2.7 + + + + 2.1 8.1 1 0.05 0.02 . 0.02 0.00005 87.5 1.05 0.13 888M 0.060001 . 0.089 1.90 . @.0000002 0.002 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.00000005 0.0000002 0 .0000003 0.000001 0.00003 0.000006 0.0015 Total supplied to sea‘ (grams per 100 per grams) Percentage of Total Element Supplied to Sea Water now in Solution 10.8 + 28.0 0.14 ———— from Crust of .031 4.7 .0024 000031 Micre| Hop )0r Blac MO ly denus earth (grams per 100 grams) + * + . Otannne ron Pete 11 Total + 42.0 + 012 _pitrogen “exy wen od ium ; A given chemical element may also exert secondary effects. A few elements have produced significant alterations in the availability of other chemical elements to the organisms during the history of the biosphere. If some of these alterations had not been effected, several ecological relationships would now be different from those that are observed, Plus (+) signifies trace amounts. Solar pS Od tne (Underwood, 1956). In addition to the immediate effects, the characteristics and availability of a chemical element throughout the history of the biosphere may have resulted in detectable patterns of uvilization or non-utilization within organisms now living. ‘hese patterns may not be easily discerned unless a large variety of organisms from different environments are compared, Abundances of elements in the solar atmosphere, total earth, crust of the earth, and in sea water. The amounts of the elements supplied to the sea and the percentages of the amounts supplied now in wt sma tennae no eet ee 0.000001 0.0002 0.019 250.0 16.0 0.0028 1.8 1.70 62.0 1.25 10.0 EE 4.88 0.0002 .071 . 0.03 0.019 2 18 1s . . 0.009 0.002 0.06 3.0 0.0003 0.00003 0.0014 0.005 0.004 0.008 0.004 0.004 0.007 0.01 0.0009 0.11 0.000018 33.0 1958 P Adaited trom Goldner Communication, after Goldberg, 1961 idt, in Rankama and Sahama, 1950. earts*Presen a... t address:. . 300.0 10, 000.0 Job. : oo Puerto Rico Nuclear Center, Mayaguez, “th _

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