Non-biological elements of a forest ecosystem can include rocks, soil, other elements within the soil, including various naturally occurring mineral deposits, and even air and the water itself contained in rivers and streams; each of these is vitally necessary to the forest.
Unfortunately, chemical pollutants are also substances that can be considered a 'part' of the ecosystem, ranging from runoff pesticides, industrial effluent, acid rain, and even simple litter, each of which has a diverse effect on the ecosystem.
Rocks, dead plant and animal matter, and your brain.
rocks
The name for the nonliving parts is a Abiotic Factors.
Any and all heat, like flame, is nonliving. A forest fire is flame and is therefore nonliving.
The nonliving parts of an organism's environment are called abiotic factors.
communities and nonliving environments. Abiotic-nonliving Biotic-living
Living - Biotic Nonliving - Abiotic
Rocks, and dirt
Abiotic
living, and nonliving
Abiotic Factors
Ask your parents.
living, and nonliving
abiotic