Abiotic component
non-living chemical and physical parts of the environment that affect living organisms and the functioning of ecosystems
In biology and ecology, abiotic components or abiotic factors are non-living chemical and physical parts of the environment that affect living organisms in terms of growth, maintenance and reproduction and the functioning of ecosystems. Abiotic factors and phenomena associated with them underpin all biology.
Quotes
edit- When I was a student, back in the days when mammoths roamed the earth, ecologists tended to believe that the character of living systems was largely determined by abiotic factors. This means influences such as local climate, geology or the availability of nutrients. But it now seems that this belief arose from the study of depleted ecosystems. The rules they derived now appear to have described not the world in its natural state, but the world of our creation. We now know that living systems which retain their large carnivores and large herbivores often behave in radically different ways from those which have lost them.
- George Monbiot "Why whale poo matters", The Guardian (12 December 2014)