Producers .
Yes, it is a perfect example of an abiotic factor. It is found in air which is also abiotic. Just because it is used by plants to make their food doesn't make it biotic. The other factor to consider it that it is not alive.
Abiotic Factors does not depend on biotic factors because they are non-living things, it's the other way around Biotic Factors depend on abiotic in order to survive like fish cannot live underwater without water, worms cannot live without soil, and humans can't live without flowers because sunlight give flowers photosynthesis which flowers need to make carbon dioxide and humans need to breath in.
An ocean provides water, salt, oxygen for animals, and food. Without water, plants wouldn't live, and herbivores need to eat plants. All animals need oxygen. People use salt to make food have better taste.
The abiotic factors would include all of the nonliving things that make up the arctic biome, such as the ice and snow, wind, weather, climate, rocks, mountains, dirt/soil, etc... Whereas, the biotic factors include all of the living things (organisms) that are typical of that biome, such as the plants, animals, bacteria, etc...
they both have to do with animals
some abiotic factors include soil nutrients, oxygen, and sunlight for photosynthesis
biotic factors are living things that make up an enviorment they can be plants and animals
Yes, it is a perfect example of an abiotic factor. It is found in air which is also abiotic. Just because it is used by plants to make their food doesn't make it biotic. The other factor to consider it that it is not alive.
Biotic factors are living things and abiotic factors are non-living things. They interact in that living things depend on non-living things to survive. One example of them interacting is when the sun (abiotic) helps make foods for the plants (biotic).
Air to breath, water to drink, soil for plants to grow on, so it has food, and sunlight to see and for plants to make food from.
Abiotic Factors does not depend on biotic factors because they are non-living things, it's the other way around Biotic Factors depend on abiotic in order to survive like fish cannot live underwater without water, worms cannot live without soil, and humans can't live without flowers because sunlight give flowers photosynthesis which flowers need to make carbon dioxide and humans need to breath in.
Abiotic factors scientifically are the nonliving things in, and that effect an ecosystem. With that definition, the abiotic factors of every ecosystem are: sunlight, water, soil, temperature and oxygen Biotic factors are anything that is living in an ecosystem. plants, animals and humans make up most biotic factors. there must be thousands of different biotic and abiotic factors in just the salt water biome, but some examples would be: Biotic: algae, fungi, seaweed (etc) aquatic mammals, fish and other Abiotic: all of the above. in turn it would take days to name all of the biotic and abiotic factors of the sea, but here's a brief summary.
A Eucalypt depends on abiotic factors, such as sunlight, water, carbon dioxide, to make food by photosynthesis. A eucalypt depends on biotic factors such as birds eating insects which were feeding on leaves, and on birds and insects to pollinate flowers
You just said one! But... Light, temperature, and atmospheric gases are abiotic factors.
Sand, gravel, soil, rocks, water, light - make up the abiotic (non-living) factors of a desert. All plants and animals living in the desert make up the biotic, or living factors of a desert.
An ocean provides water, salt, oxygen for animals, and food. Without water, plants wouldn't live, and herbivores need to eat plants. All animals need oxygen. People use salt to make food have better taste.
what are cougars biotic and abiotic factors