Science, asked by rahulvanjare302, 3 months ago

2] What will happen if non-living components disappear from the environment?​

Answers

Answered by ismail36mumbai
0

Answer:

In biology and ecology, abiotic components or abiotic factors are non-living chemical and physical parts of the environment that affect living organisms and the functioning of ecosystems. Abiotic factors and the phenomena associated with them underpin biology as a whole.

Answered by smartguy001
0

Answer:

All living things (organisms) are made of non living materials, just molecules (which are made of atom). So when you say all non living things are removed… then there wouldn't be space or a universe.

But if you mean by taking away the abiotic factors from an ecosystem, that is an whole other question! And I guess that is the case, so I will also answer that one.

All creaturen depend on abiotic factors: water, rocks, sand, and what not. Water is needed to keep the chemical processes going in the organisms.

Rocks and Stones provide cover for the smaller ones and weapons for the (primitive) bigger ones.

Sunlight provides energy for the plants, trees and blushes, so animal or insect can eat them. Air is needed as a large container for the CO2 and O2 circle.

So, if all that would be taken out of the equation, there is nothing left. All organisms would die shortly after the abiotic factors have dissapeared. Mostly death due to cold.

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