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you can e-mail me at ramzhielle_047@yahoo.com..

2006-07-03 22:00:22 · 3 answers · asked by elleihzmar 1 in Social Science Economics

3 answers

I opt for the metabolism, but have no source outside of dealing with flu epidemiology. A virus has no metabolsm and qualifies as both an organism and non-living.

2006-07-05 15:08:47 · answer #1 · answered by bizsmithy 5 · 0 0

An organism's habitat is the specific place that an organism lives. All habitats contain living and nonliving elements. Animals and plants are common living elements. Rocks and soil are common nonliving elements. Soil is comprised of many living bacteria and organisms. For the purpose of this activity, it will be considered nonliving. Other nonliving parts of a habitat include temperature, humidity, amount of sunlight and shade, shelter from or exposure to wind, and air quality. All of these features influence how an organism lives. Living elements change to nonliving elements through natural and unnatural processes.

2006-07-04 00:46:59 · answer #2 · answered by rekha 1 · 0 0

technically, a metabolism.

2006-07-03 22:27:01 · answer #3 · answered by juniperflux32 3 · 0 0

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