The environment of an organism is described by biotic (living) and abiotic (non-living) factors. As examples, a biotic factor could be a competitor for food, and an abiotic factor could be the amount of sunlight that gets to an organism.
Ecosystem
ecosystem
Living things are living, breathing, eating organisms that take and contribute to their ecosystem. Nonliving things do not breathe, eat, or need water (e.g., a rock). A dead organism is a once-living creature that has become a nonliving thing.
Yes, there are relationships between living and nonliving things. For example: Without water (which is a nonliving thing) we and water animals can't survive.
The cell is the smallest living thing and an atom is the smallest non-living thing.
That depends on what part of the world that living thing lives in.
living things can move from one place to another whereas none living things can move
Living things and nonliving things are not the same. It's basically Organic v.s. Inorganic.
You are a living thing and your computer is a nonliving thing.
the term is called abiotic and biotic for nonliving and living things.
living things can not respair&Non living things are respair
living things can not respair&Non living things are respair
living things are humans plants and animals
Living things are living, breathing, eating organisms that take and contribute to their ecosystem. Nonliving things do not breathe, eat, or need water (e.g., a rock). A dead organism is a once-living creature that has become a nonliving thing.
Yes, there are relationships between living and nonliving things. For example: Without water (which is a nonliving thing) we and water animals can't survive.
The cell is the smallest living thing and an atom is the smallest non-living thing.
The sun is nonliving.
living thing has a cell and a nonliving thing doesn't
living thing has a cell and a nonliving thing doesn't