Dr. Helmenstine holds a Ph.D. in biomedical sciences and is a science writer, educator, and consultant. She has taught science courses at the high school, college, and graduate levels.
Updated on January 12, 2020In ecology, biotic and abiotic factors make up an ecosystem. Biotic factors are the living parts of the ecosystem, such as plants, animals, and bacteria. Abiotic factors are the nonliving parts of the environment, such as air, minerals, temperature, and sunlight. Organisms require both biotic and abiotic factors to survive. Also, a deficit or abundance of either component can limit other factors and influence an organism's survival. The nitrogen, phosphorus, water, and carbon cycles have both biotic and abiotic components.
Biotic factors include any living component of an ecosystem. They include related biological factors, such as pathogens, effects of human influence, and diseases. Living components fall into one three categories:
Abiotic factors are the nonliving components of an ecosystem that an organism or population needs for growth, maintenance, and reproduction. Examples of abiotic factors include sunlight, tides, water, temperature, pH, minerals, and events, such as volcanic eruptions and storms. An abiotic factor typically affects other abiotic factors. For example, decreased sunlight can lower temperature, which in turn affects wind and humidity.
Limiting factors are features in an ecosystem that restrict its growth. The concept is based upon Liebig's Law of the Minimum, which states that growth isn't controlled by the total amount of resources, but by the one that is scarcest. A limiting factor may be biotic or abiotic. The limiting factor in an ecosystem can change, but only one factor is in effect at a time. An example of a limiting factor is the amount of sunlight in a rainforest. The growth of plants on the forest floor is limited by light availability. The limiting factor also accounts for competition between individual organisms.
Any ecosystem, no matter how larger or small, contains both biotic and abiotic factors. For example, a houseplant growing on a windowsill may be considered to be a small ecosystem. Biotic factors include the plant, the bacteria in the soil, and the care a person takes to keep the plant alive. Abiotic factors include light, water, air, the temperature, the soil, and the pot. An ecologist could seek the limiting factor for the plant, which might be the size of the pot, the amount of sunlight available to the plant, the nutrients in the soil, a plant disease, or some other factor. In a larger ecosystem, like the entire biosphere of Earth, accounting for all of the biotic and abiotic factors becomes incredibly complex.