United States Department of Agriculture - Agricultural Research Service
Northwest Irrigation & Soils Research Lab, Kimberly, ID
Water and Nutrient
Cycling
Water is essential in the process
of weathering primary minerals (rocks or geologic parent materials), transforming
the minerals into secondary minerals (clays and silts), and dissolving
mineral nutrients into the soil water solution.
Water is the transport medium
for nutrients absorbed by plant roots and transported throughout the plant
tissues (transpiration).
Water evaporation (transpiration)
from the plant leaves helps cool the plant, similar to how perspiration
(to sweat) does to humans.
Almost all physiological processes
in plants take place in the presence of water, and water is commonly the
most limiting factor in plant growth.
Water supplies the hydrogen
which joins with the carbon dioxide to form sugar by the process of photosynthesis.
Land plants (on average) require
about 400 pounds of water for each pound of dry plant material produced.
Water dissolves nutrients in
decaying plant material and animal products and transports the nutrients
into the soil to be recycled or when water runs off the land, into streams
or lakes.
Water also physically transports
soil into water bodies. This is called erosion.
When too many nutrients occur
in water bodies, algae and aquatic plants may grow abundantly. In slow-moving
water, as the algae and aquatic plants decay, oxygen can become limited
to fish and other organisms. This natural process is call eutrophication.
Hyper-eutrophication causes
water to be unfit for drinking or swimming.