Abiotic factors of the deserts in California are the high temperatures and lack of precipitation.
The amount of annual rainfall affecting a cactus' growth in a desert ecosystem is an example of an abiotic factor. Abiotic factors are non-living components of an ecosystem that influence the organisms living within it.
Yes air is abiotic because it cannot breathe.Air is abiotic. Abiotic includes anything that is not alive.**********************************************Abiotic means somethig different from the above amateur definitions.The following definition from the first paragraph of Wikipedia Is far more informative. ...In ecology and biology, abiotic components (also known as abiotic factors) are non-living chemical and physical factors in the environment, which affect ecosystems. Abiotic phenomena underlie all of biology.It is unfair for the ignorant to make uneducated and ill informed guesses.JCF
Well as you know that an Abiotic is something that is NOT living: Such as Sand, rocks,soil, etc And biotic is living... Such as rattlesnakes, Kangaroo rats, Tarantulas,spadefoot toad, Gila monsters, lean kit foxes-- Living things!
yes benches are abiotic because they are not living things like animals or plantes.
I predation is neither abiotic or biotic. The 2 terms mean with life or without life. Predation is an act that a predator preforms. The predator is alive, this true. But it does not fit the definition of abiotic or biotic.
The biggest abiotic factor that affects all desert plants is temperature. This heat makes life for all desert plants very difficult.
Yes, precipitation is an abiotic factor in the desert. Deserts have minimal rainfall, making water availability a critical limiting factor for the survival of plant and animal life in these ecosystems. The amount and timing of precipitation greatly influence desert flora and fauna distributions and adaptations.
In some deserts sand is the most visible abiotic factor. In others it might be gravel, rock or soil.
Soil, sand, gravel, rocks, water and light are all abiotic factors.
Soil, sand, rocks, water are all abiotic. All plants and animals are biotic.
A desert is a mixture of both biotic and abiotic factors. Soil, sand, rock, water, air and light are abiotic while plants and animals are biotic.
The abiotic factor that describes the desert biome climate is low precipitation. Deserts receive very little rainfall, leading to dry and arid conditions with high temperatures and low humidity.
Sand is a non-living (abiotic) material found in deserts.
The amount of annual rainfall affecting a cactus' growth in a desert ecosystem is an example of an abiotic factor. Abiotic factors are non-living components of an ecosystem that influence the organisms living within it.
Water, or the lack of water, has the greatest effect on cacti.
abiotic
A desert contains both living (biotic) and nonliving (abiotic) factors.