No.
non-living ;)
A river is an abiotic factor of an ecosystem because it is technically nonliving.
Biotic Factors
A biotic factor is any factor living in a biome. Examples are bamboo trees, lemurs, grasses, rubber trees, and insects.
the major difference between abiotic and biotic factor is that abiotic is the nonliving component of the earth e.g soil rain while biotic factor is the living component of the earth e.g animals and plants.
Biotic factors are living creatures and abiotic factors are nonliving. Examples of a biotic factor is a worm. An abiotic factor can be dirt. The worm needs the dirt as a home and to keep cool.
Water is considered an abiotic factor in an environment, as it is a non-living component that plays a vital role in the ecosystem for the survival of biotic factors. Despite being essential for all forms of life, water itself is not alive and therefore classified as abiotic.
Biotic factors in an area, ecosystem, or biome are the living factors. Abiotic is the antonym, non-living factors. For example, some biotic factors in a biome are; plants, animals, bacteria, growth rate, etc. Some abiotic factors include; sunlight, water, wind/air currents, temperature, rocks, etc.
it is abiotic because it is a nonliving thing just learned last week.
All animals and plants are the biotic factors of any biome.
A nonliving factor would be called an abiotic factor. A living factor would be called biotic
A biotic factor refers to any living component in an ecosystem that influences other organisms within that ecosystem. Examples include plants, animals, fungi, and bacteria. Biotic factors play a crucial role in shaping the dynamics and balance of ecosystems.