it will pollute the lake if it has chemicals that didn't come from the earth. and if the fertilizer has polltion like oil in it, it can polllute the lake and kill the fish. or the fertilizer can infect the plants like seaweed and if the fish eat the seaweed they have a possibility of dying.
PS-save the earth don't pollute
how is phosphates incorporated in plants and animals
Nitrates enter the cell through the process of active transport. Nitrates are essential for development of leaves of a plant and are absorbed through root hair cells.
Nitrates can enter urine through dietary ingestion of nitrates from foods such as leafy green vegetables, root vegetables, and processed meats. The body metabolizes dietary nitrates into nitrites, which are then excreted in the urine.
Phosphorus may enter the phosphorus cycle through weathering of rocks and minerals, which releases phosphorus into the soil and water. Additionally, human activities like agriculture and fertilizer use can contribute to phosphorus entering the cycle through runoff and leaching.
Nitrates can enter a freshwater source through runoff from agricultural fields where fertilizers are used, as well as from leaking septic tanks, livestock waste, or wastewater treatment plants. Once in the water, nitrates can lead to eutrophication, which can harm aquatic life and degrade water quality.
lakes
Nitrates enter plants primarily through their roots via a process called root uptake. This occurs when nitrates in the soil are absorbed by the plant's root system and then transported within the plant to support various metabolic processes, such as protein synthesis. Nitrate uptake is facilitated by specific transport proteins located in the root cell membranes.
At the coast.
Phosphorus generally does not exist as gas
They can enter by passing trucks, or vehicles because of the speed they are travailing at, the salt can fly into the rivers/ oceans because of the wind.
Yes, the phosphorus cycle does include the atmosphere but in very small amounts. Phosphorus can enter the atmosphere through volcanic eruptions, dust particles, and some industrial processes, but the atmosphere is not a major reservoir for phosphorus in the way it is for carbon, nitrogen, or water.
Sources of phosphorus in the phosphorus cycle include weathering of rocks, decomposition of organic matter, excretion by organisms, and runoff from fertilized agricultural areas. These sources release phosphorus into the soil, where it can be taken up by plants and eventually re-enter the cycle through consumption by animals and decomposition of organic material.