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Living. Because viruses are caused by germs...which are living organisms
A non-living thing in an ecosystem would be a rock or the soil.
Ice is a nonliving thing. It is frozen water and water is an abiotic factor so ice is nonliving. Living things need water food and shelter to survive and ice is considered shelter for the Arctic animals. (penguins, polar bears, etc.)
The answer would have to be water,soil,shelter,and everything that is nonliving.
because they help the organisms survive. with out them they would die. examples: water air with out these we all would die
If it is sessile (does not move, not motile), it can be mistaken to be nonliving.
Living. Because viruses are caused by germs...which are living organisms
A non-living thing in an ecosystem would be a rock or the soil.
carbon dioxde
Because it has no existing life on it. If any living thing were to land on the Sun, it would burn due to very high temperature.
Because it has no existing life on it. If any living thing were to land on the Sun, it would burn due to very high temperature.
A biologist would likely only study physical things in regards to how they affect living things.
Yes the wind whispering would be a personification as people whisper and personification is giving a human characteristic to a nonliving thing.
No, but I would marry him if I had the chance. He is the cutest thing ever! <3
A nonliving factor would be called an abiotic factor. A living factor would be called biotic
There is no such thing as a "non-living" cell. If you are referring to living things being produces by non-living sources that would be abiogenesis.
Ice is a nonliving thing. It is frozen water and water is an abiotic factor so ice is nonliving. Living things need water food and shelter to survive and ice is considered shelter for the Arctic animals. (penguins, polar bears, etc.)