
Abiotic & Biotic
Presentation
•
Biology
•
7th Grade
•
Practice Problem
•
Easy
+2
Standards-aligned
Jim Plaggemeyer
Used 3+ times
FREE Resource
3 Slides • 13 Questions
1
Abiotic and Biotic Factors
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3
Open Ended
What is a biotic factor?
4
Open Ended
List 4 examples of biotic factors from the video.
5
Open Ended
What is an abiotic factor?
6
Open Ended
List 5 examples of abiotic factors from the video.
7
Open Ended
Think about a desert ecosystem. List 3 biotic and abiotic interactions that occur within the ecosystem.
8
Limiting Factors and Carrying Capacity
In the 1800s, a disease ruined much of the potato crop in Ireland. Since many Irish people depended on potatoes as their main food source, mass hunger and migration resulted. The potato blight caused Ireland's population to drop.
For a population to be healthy, resources such as food, nutrients, water, and space, must be available. Limiting factors are any resources that can lower the population size by decreasing birth rates, increasing death rates, or leading to migration. Some examples of limiting factors include a low food supply and a lack of space.
Biotic limiting factors are living things in an environment, including available food and the number of predators. Limiting factors that are not living things are called abiotic factors. Some examples include available sunlight, water, nutrients, oxygen, and temperature of the habitat.
A struggle for resources like food and space causes a population to stop growing. When a population’s growth rate is decreasing, it is because the population has reached its carrying capacity. The carrying capacity is the largest population that can be supported in an area without destroying the habitat. Limiting factors decide the carrying capacity of a population.
If there are 12 hamburgers at a lunch table and 24 people sit down at a lunch table, will everyone be able to eat? At first, you may just split hamburgers in half. However, if more and more people keep coming to sit at the lunch table, you will not be able to feed everyone. In nature, any organisms (living things) that cannot get food will either move to find a new place to live or they will die.
In nature, when the population size is small, there is usually plenty of food for everyone. Organisms can easily breed, so the birth rate is high. As the population increases, the amount of resources may drop.
When necessary resources like food and space disappear, some organisms will die. Then the birth rates drop, and population growth rate decreases. This natural cycle repeatedly happens until the population reaches equilibrium, where the number of organisms and the resources available is balanced.
9
Open Ended
Define - population
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Open Ended
Define - limiting factors
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Open Ended
Define - biotic
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Open Ended
Define - carrying capacity
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Multiple Choice
How does a decrease in abiotic resources impact the population growth in an ecosystem?
the population size will increase
the population size will decrease
the population size will not change
14
Multiple Choice
What determines the carrying capacity in an ecosystem?
the number of different species in the ecosystem
Limiting factors
Only biotic factors
Only abiotic factors
15
Multiple Choice
Which of the following is an example of two organisms competing for an abiotic factor?
two different species of insects competing for leaves from trees
two different species of mammals competing for small rodents to eat
two different species of birds competing for berries to eat
two different species of mammals competing for the same water source
16
Categorize
bacteria
fungi
grass
rainfall
Sort the pictures into 2 different groups, using whatever categories you want. Then answer the following questions.
Abiotic and Biotic Factors
Show answer
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