Ecosystems and Habitats
Life and Earth Science
Students compare major ecosystems including forests, grasslands, deserts, and aquatic environments. They examine organism adaptations and investigate how environmental changes affect populations.
Learning Material
4 pagesWhat Is an Ecosystem?
What Is an Ecosystem?#
An ecosystem is all the living things (organisms) in an area AND the non-living parts of their environment working together as a system. Understanding ecosystems means understanding how living and non-living things interact.
Biotic and Abiotic Factors#
Biotic factors are all the living parts of an ecosystem:
- Plants, animals, fungi, bacteria
- Includes organisms that are alive AND dead organisms (as food/nutrients)
Abiotic factors are all the non-living parts:
- Sunlight, temperature, water, soil type
- Wind, precipitation, air, minerals
Biotic and abiotic factors interact constantly. For example:
- Sunlight (abiotic) enables plants (biotic) to grow
- Plants improve soil (abiotic) quality
- Soil quality affects which animals (biotic) can live there
What Is a Habitat?#
A habitat is the specific place where an organism lives — the environment that provides its food, water, shelter, and space. A habitat must meet all of an organism's survival needs.
- A monarch butterfly's habitat: meadows with milkweed plants
- A clownfish's habitat: tropical coral reef
- A polar bear's habitat: Arctic ice flös
What Is a Biome?#
A biome is a large geographic area with similar climate, plants, and animals. The major land biomes include:
| Biome | Climate | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Tropical rainforest | Hot, very wet | Amazon, Congo |
| Desert | Hot or cold, very dry | Sahara, Gobi |
| Grassland/Savanna | Warm, moderate rain | African savanna |
| Temperate forest | Moderate, 4 seasons | Eastern US forests |
| Taiga/Boreal forest | Cold, moderate snow | Canada, Russia |
| Tundra | Extremely cold, dry | Arctic |
| Ocean | Varies by depth | Pacific, Atlantic |
Each biome has characteristic organisms adapted to its specific conditions.