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Science·Rainforests·conceptual

Nutrient Cycling in Thin Soil

Understand the paradox of nutrient cycling in rainforests — despite lush growth, rainforest soil is typically thin and nutrient-poor because most nutrients are locked in living organisms, not the soil; decomposition is rapid in the warm, wet conditions, and nutrients released from dead material are immediately absorbed by plant roots and fungi, creating a fast, closed-loop recycling system

Suggested ages 9–11

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Evidence of understanding

  • Explain that rainforest soil is thin and nutrient-poor despite the lush growth above
  • Describe the rapid decomposition cycle: dead material → decomposers → nutrients released → immediately absorbed by roots
  • Explain why clearing rainforest for farming fails after a few years — once the trees are gone, the nutrients are lost

Assessment prompt

Can Nutrient Cycling in Thin Soil explain the surprising fact that rainforest soil is actually poor and thin — that the nutrients aren't in the ground but locked inside the living plants and animals, constantly being recycled?

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