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Other nonliving parts of the ecosystem that help you are: water, sunlight, and oxygen. The most important living part of the ecosystem is plants.
all the animals in a swamp
Fire is an Abiotic factor. The definition of Abiotic factors are the nonliving part of the ecosystem. I am pretty positive that fire is nonliving.
Yes, CO2 gas is nonliving and a part of the ecosystem contributory to plant food manufacture, but so is water, photons of light and the trace minerals the plants use to make food.
No. The system consists of all living and nonliving things found in a large area. In a tropical forest ecosystem, they would be many. many different kinds of living things plus the nonliving things. In a desert ecosystem, there are fewer living things but many of the same nonliving things.Living: insects, bugs, bacteria, worms, centipedes, plants, birds and animals.Nonliving: sand, rocks, water and air.
The nonliving parts of an ecosystem are the abiotic components, while the living ones are biotic components.
Rocks, air, light, and soil are among the nonliving things found in an ecosystem.
Other nonliving parts of the ecosystem that help you are: water, sunlight, and oxygen. The most important living part of the ecosystem is plants.
Any types of water or rocks
Yes, because it is a nonliving part of an ecosystem. yes it does .
they both work together
No because dirt is the nonliving part of the ecosystem.
all the animals in a swamp
Water systems travel through the nonliving part of an ecosystem through evaporation, condensation, and precipitation.
Fire is an Abiotic factor. The definition of Abiotic factors are the nonliving part of the ecosystem. I am pretty positive that fire is nonliving.
anything that doesn't breathe, like rocks or dirt
Yes, CO2 gas is nonliving and a part of the ecosystem contributory to plant food manufacture, but so is water, photons of light and the trace minerals the plants use to make food.