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 An ecosystem may be a geographical area where plants, animals, and other organisms, also as weather and landscape, work together to make a bubble of life. Ecosystems contain biotic or living, parts, also as abiotic factors, or nonliving parts. Biotic factors include plants, animals, and other organisms. Abiotic factors include rocks, temperature, and humidity. Every think about an ecosystem depends on every other factor, either directly or indirectly. A change within the temperature of an ecosystem will often affect what plants will grow there, as an example . Animals that depend upon plants for food and shelter will need to adapt to the changes, move to a different ecosystem, or perish. Ecosystems are often very large or very small. Tide pools, the ponds left by the ocean because the tide goes out, are complete, tiny ecosystems. Tide pools contain seaweed, a sort of algae, which uses photosynthesis to make food. Herbivores like abalone eat the seaweed. Carnivores like sea stars eat other animals within the tide pool, like clams or mussels. Tide pools depend upon the changing level of ocean water. Some organisms, like seaweed, thrive in an aquatic environment, when the tide is in and therefore the pool is full. Other organisms, like hermit crabs, cannot live underwater and depend upon the shallow pools left by low tides. During this way, the biotic parts of the ecosystem depend upon abiotic factors.

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