Mostly trees and bananas. Both are living. As far as non-living, there's always air. They die without it, so it affects them.
The characteristic that distinguishes living things from non-living things is the ability to grow, reproduce, and respond to stimuli.
Living things and non-living things interact in various ways. For example, living things rely on non-living things like water, air, and sunlight for survival. Non-living things can also impact living organisms through pollution or habitat destruction. Overall, there is a complex relationship between living and non-living components in an ecosystem.
Living things have the capacity to reproduce, non-living things do not reproduce. The living things use biological energy for their growth and development, non-living things do not require such energy.
Living organisms have the ability to grow, reproduce, respond to stimuli, and maintain homeostasis, which refers to the ability to regulate internal conditions to ensure survival. Non-living things do not possess these characteristics and do not exhibit the same level of organization or complexity as living organisms.
Living conditions such as other similar organisms to an organism in question often results in competition for food, nutrients, and / or shelter. Natural selection is usually a result of this (natural selection is where the strongest survive), leading to evolution and development of the species. The environment, in turn, benefits from natural selection due to the decreased number of organisms draining resources. In essence, it is a cycle, with the living depending on the nonliving / other living, those being depended upon running short, the depending fighting each other, and the depended upon benefiting as a result.
yes but some times no
Yes, non-living things can affect living things. For example, environmental factors like temperature, sunlight, and air quality can have a significant impact on the health and behavior of living organisms. Additionally, non-living things like pollution or habitat destruction can harm or endanger living species.
newtest3 newdiv
monkeys are biotic factors.think like this..biotic factors are living things like flowers,bees etc...and abiotic factors are non living things like sand and rocks.hope i answered your question.
The non living environment provides nutrition and protection for living things.
ecosystem :V
Hardened rocks are not considered to be alive, and living beings (prisoners) break them into smaller rocks, so, yes, they do.
No, unless vibrations by sound will break items.
In a sloth's habitat, some living things would include other trees, plants, insects, birds, and mammals like monkeys. Non-living things would include rocks, soil, water sources like rivers or streams, and the climate conditions of the area.
living things move while non living things not
non-living things move by magic
Weather has a huge impact on non-living things. A place that has a lot of rain will likely erode rocks in the area for example.