The lake itself is non-living, but most lake have things that live in them.
They contain living things but are not living things.
No, it is abiotic
Living things depend on water in the great lakes its are major fresh water source and our main supply on salmon and other freshwater creatures that WE eat.
trout, plankton, catfish, fish, algae, turtles,
unsa man answer
No. No living things live on it. Plants, animals, rivers and lakes and ponds and oceans, rainfall, or ecosystem
living things can survive in the water beneath a lakes frozen surface
Water is a transparent fluid which forms the world's streams, lakes, oceans and rain, and is the major constituent of the fluids of living things.
The environment in any community is composed of all the non-living and living things that are naturally on earth. They include forests, rivers, lakes, mountains and rocks just but to mention a few.
Living- Fish, plants, bacteria, and things like that Non-living- rocks, water, waste, and other things like that.
they have lots of things
they invade the habitat of other organisms living there and they start to overtake the lakes which decreases the biodiversity in the great lakes.
The living things have life while the non-living things do not have life. The living things locomote and respond to stimuli while the non-living things do not.
* Living things are made of cells. * Living things obtain and use energy. * Living things grow and develop. * Living things reproduce. * Living things respond to their environment. * Living things adapt to their environment.