The disposing of sewage into water is one way humans interfere with the nitrogen cycle. Humans are also responsible for releasing large amounts of NOx gasses into the atmosphere, which interferes with the nitrogen cycle as well.
Humans intervene in the nitrogen cycle by adding fertilizers, using anaerobic bacteria, discharging liquid waste/sewage into waterways, burning land (removes Nitrogen Oxide), mining, harvesting crops, and irrigation.
pollution eating & release of gas (fart)
Humans alter the nitrogen cycle in various ways. One of the common ways is the application of nitrogen fertilizers on crops.
combustion from the industrial evolution affect human because it traps the ozone layer causing the temperature to rise.
Yes. All living things are part of the nitrogen cycle.
by killing animals for food because they can't decompose as fertilizer
Plants transfer nitrogen in the nitrogen cycle through assimilation.
The first step of the nitrogen cycle is nitrogen fixation.
the nitrogen cycle in cludes gas
Yes. All living things are part of the nitrogen cycle.
they fertilise the land
they don't. humans are a part of the nitrogen cycle. we eat it in our food, it stays in our bodies, then it leaves our body when we die so it can be used again.
Humans impact the nitrogen cycle by making fertilizers and burning fossil fuels, which alter the amount of fixed nitrogen our ecosystems.
Humans impact the nitrogen cycle by burning fossil fuels, dumping waste in bodies of water, and using fertilizer.
The carbon cycle and nitrogen cycle are related due to both plants and mammals using them. Plants take both carbon and nitrogen in and convert them to sugars and proteins that humans eat when eating the plants.
they get to much on one side than the other
it is in the nitrogen cycle
by killing animals for food because they can't decompose as fertilizer
Plants transfer nitrogen in the nitrogen cycle through assimilation.
the nitrogen cycle
The first step of the nitrogen cycle is nitrogen fixation.