Plants and animals are the biotic (living) factors and soil, sand, gravel, rocks and water are abiotic (nonliving) factors.
sun, wind, temperature, sand, moon
Sand, soil, rocks, gravel, water, air, light
Soil, sand, gravel, rocks, water, sunlight - all abiotic factors in the desert.
Non-living factors are called abiotic factors and include such things as soil, sand, gravel, rocks, water, air and light.
Soil. sand, gravel, rocks, water, air and light are all abiotic factors of a desert.
Soil, sand, rock, water, light, air.
Rain, rock, soil, sunlight, and air
cactus
rocks,sand,wood,water
Nonliving, it's an ecosystem, not an organism.
Soil, rocks, sand, gravel, water, air and light are all nonliving (abiotic) factors in the Mojave Desert.
A desert has both biotic (living) as well as abiotic (nonliving) factors.
Sand is a non-living (abiotic) material found in deserts.
Parts of the tundra can be nearly as dry as a desert.
Soil, sand, gravel, rocks, water, sunlight - all abiotic factors in the desert.
Soil, sand, gravel, rocks, water, sunlight - all abiotic factors in the desert.
Nonliving, it's an ecosystem, not an organism.
Sand, rock, soil, water, air - are all nonliving things found in a desert.
Sand, soil, gravel, rocks, water, air - all are abiotic (nonliving) factors in a desert.
The name for the nonliving parts is a Abiotic Factors.
Sand, soid, gravel, rock, water and light are all abiotic (nonliving) factors in a desert.
The nonliving parts of an organism's environment are called abiotic factors.
Soil, rocks, sand, gravel, water, air and light are all nonliving (abiotic) factors in the Mojave Desert.
A desert has both biotic (living) as well as abiotic (nonliving) factors.
A desert contains both living (biotic) and nonliving (abiotic) factors.
Abiotic factors are nonliving parts of the environment. Such things as soil, sand, gravel, rocks, water, air and sunlight.