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Biology
ECOLOGY:
Biotic & Abiotic Factors
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Biotic
factors
The
living
parts of an
environment
Abiotic
factors
The
non-living
parts of an environment
Biotic factors
Availability of
food
Arrival of a new
predator
Competition
between species
New
pathogens
Availability of food
All animals eat other living
organisms
, whether animals or
plants
Availability
of
food falls
Number
of
organisms
in that community will also fall
Arrival of a new
predator
Can cause the
population
of a prey species to fall, and affect existing
predators
Competition between species
If a species is
out-competed
, its population can fall to the point where it becomes
extinct
New
pathogens
If an
infectious
disease emerges and spreads, it can wipe out a
population
of a species
Abiotic factors
Light
intensity
Temperature
Water
pH
and
mineral
content of soil
Wind
intensity and
direction
Carbon
dioxide
Oxygen
Light intensity
Can affect the rate of
photosynthesis
in plants, and thus their
growth
Light intensity is too
low
Rate of
photosynthesis
falls, plants will grow more
slowly
Temperature
Can affect the
distribution
of species
Water
Needed for
survival
of both plants and animals
pH and mineral content of soil
Important for
plant growth
, many plants cannot grow in soil that is too acidic or too
alkaline
Wind intensity and direction
Can affect
water
loss in
plants
Carbon dioxide
Needed for plants to
photosynthesize
Carbon dioxide levels fall
Rate of
photosynthesis
can
decrease
Oxygen
Needed for
aerobic
respiration, levels in water can fall and be
harmful
to aquatic organisms