Biotic & Abiotic Factors

Cards (18)

  • 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