All of these.
Sunlight, food, oxygen.
These factors are called limiting factors. Limiting factors are elements within an ecosystem that restrict the growth, abundance, or distribution of an organism or a population. They include both biotic factors (e.g., competition, predation) and abiotic factors (e.g., temperature, water availability).
biotic
There are many abiotic and biotic factors that can limit populations in an ecosystem.
abiotic resource. Examples include environmental factors like drought, temperature extremes, or pollution that can directly affect the survival or reproduction of a population, leading to a decrease in population size.
Abiotic factors such as temperature or rainfall are not density-dependent factors limiting population growth. These factors do not change in intensity depending on the size of the population.
Rain or Sun
density independent limiting factor
These factors are called limiting factors. Limiting factors are elements within an ecosystem that restrict the growth, abundance, or distribution of an organism or a population. They include both biotic factors (e.g., competition, predation) and abiotic factors (e.g., temperature, water availability).
I can name a lot more than two biotic and abiotic factors!This is the biotic in a forest habitat:DeerTreesGrassMushroomsFishBirdsBacteriaBearsand any other thing livingThis is a list of the abiotic factors:RocksWaterDead BarkSoilAirand any other thing that is non-living
the abiotic factors that can cause a whooping crane's population to decrease are water, air, space, and breeding grounds.
biotic
There are many abiotic and biotic factors that can limit populations in an ecosystem.
Abiotic factors refer to the non-living components of an ecosystem. An abiotic factor that can be a limiting factor for a coyote population is the lack of water, since it is essential for their survival.
Because of Limiting Factors (environmental factors that prevent a population from increasing). Biotic Limiting Factors = Living organisms; Abiotic Limiting Factors = Nonliving organisms.Other factors include: Death Rate, Birth Rate, Carrying Capacity, Predation
Climate,lack of shelter, sicknesses and parasites, food or water as well as the carrying capacity are examples of limiting factors.
Temperature and salinity levels are abiotic limiting factors that can significantly impact organisms in marine biomes. Organisms have specific temperature and salinity ranges within which they can survive and thrive, and changes in these factors can disrupt their physiological processes and overall health.
Nonliving limiting factors are also known as abiotic factors. They include the temperature of the air, the temperature of the soil, sunlight intensity, nutrients in the soil, and the speed of the wind.