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drag the correct label to each location. the labels can be used more th…

Question

drag the correct label to each location. the labels can be used more than once.
identify each example on the diagram as a carbon source or a carbon sink.
carbon sink carbon source
the carbon cycle
carbon dioxide co₂ atmosphere
photosynthesis combustion
respiration
plants animals factories power stations vehicle emissions
respiration energy
fossil fuels coal oil natural gas

Explanation:

Brief Explanations
  • Photosynthesis (Plants): During photosynthesis, plants take in \( \text{CO}_2 \) from the atmosphere and convert it into organic matter, storing carbon. So this is a carbon sink.
  • Combustion (Factories, Power Stations, Vehicle Emissions): Combustion of fossil fuels or other materials releases \( \text{CO}_2 \) into the atmosphere, adding carbon. So this is a carbon source.
  • Fossil Fuels (and the arrow from Animals/Plants to Fossil Fuels): Fossil fuels store carbon (they are a long - term carbon sink in their unburned state, but when considering the cycle, the process of them being a source when burned, and the deposition of organic matter from plants/animals to form fossil fuels is a sink - like process in the long - term storage. But in the context of the cycle, the "Fossil Fuels" box (and the arrow into it) represents the storage of carbon from dead plants/animals, so it is a carbon sink (for the storage part; when burned, it's a source, but the box here is about the storage). Also, the respiration from animals and plants releases \( \text{CO}_2 \), so the respiration arrows (from animals/plants to atmosphere) are sources, but the "Fossil Fuels" box (the one with the arrow from plants/animals) is a sink.

Answer:

  • Photosynthesis (Plants): carbon sink
  • Combustion (Factories, Power Stations, Vehicle Emissions): carbon source
  • Fossil Fuels (and the arrow from Plants/Animals to Fossil Fuels): carbon sink
  • Respiration (from Plants/Animals to Atmosphere): carbon source