glass is nonliving. The non-living factors that are part of the ocean ecosystem include water, the substrate (rock or sand), and the minerals and gases dissolved in the water.
living=biotic
non-living=abiotic
biotic beings are(ocean): fish, turtles, seaweed,starfish
abiotic beings are (ocean)=rocks,sand
Trick question. Non-living things do not live anywhere. There is plenty of debris floating around in the oceans though.
living: at least 1,000,000 different species of plant, animal, and protozoa.
Non living: water, salt, sand, rock, garbage, and many thousands of other things.
All the animals, plants, and organisms (microbes, bacterium) are all living. Non living things in the ocean are shells, rocks, stones, and you could consider the water non living.
pelagic fish? Pelagic means open ocean so a pleagic fish lives in the ocean in the open ocean, good examples are tuna, marlin, swordfish, mahi mahi etc...
Pyrosome are free-floating colonial tunicates that live usually in the upper layers of the open ocean in warm seas. If you look up Pyrosome, you can find some really cool pictures!
the types of ocean biomes are the near shore zone,the intertidal zone and the open ocean zone
It is still the cell by convention, but it appears that ribonucleic acid (RNA) and deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) can function without a cell. On a biology test it's a cell, to an open mind it's the aforementioned acids.
Hadopelagic or hadalpelagic means open ocean farther than the neritic zone and at least 6000m deep. The organisms that live here are hard to classify. There are the hydrothermal vents, which house chemosynthetic bacteria and some worms with red feathery looking things at the top for feeding. Most of the hadopelagic zone is unexplored and before the new discovery of hydrothermal vents, it was thought that nothing lived there at all. Due to lack of deep ocean exploration it is unknown what and how much lives down there. Jellies and ctenophores probably. But very little detritus falls that far.
Many big fish live in the open ocean zone including dolphins, whales, sharks, and tuna. There are many other fish that live in the open ocean as well.
i think only the spectacled porpoise live in the open ocean.... but the others live in bays and coastal waters.....
They live in the open ocean
factors that are nonliving that play a role in the ecosystem. This includes sand and rocks on the ocean floor, shells of organisms, sunlight entering the water, and the water itself.
This question is debatable. It could either be the open-ocean zone because it is bigger and deeper so animals who can live at the bottom and the top can live in the open-ocean zone. it could be the neritic zone because of the water that flows through and etc. =D
over 5,000 species of fish live in the ocean
No whales prefer open ocean, not caves.
No, they only live on the shores of the northern Atlantic and Pacific ocean. But I am really not too sure.
open sea suface
weed plants
Aquatic Plants. Coral
Yes Yes