1 / 13

Characteristics of Living Things

Characteristics of Living Things. All living things share these 6 characteristics: . 1. Cells (at least one) 2. Ability to respond to the environment 3. Reproduce 4. DNA 5. Use energy 6. Grow and develop. Biotic vs. Abiotic. Biotic – living Abiotic - nonliving.

MikeCarlo
Télécharger la présentation

Characteristics of Living Things

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Characteristics of Living Things

  2. All living things share these 6 characteristics: 1. Cells (at least one) 2. Ability to respond to the environment 3. Reproduce 4. DNA 5. Use energy 6. Grow and develop

  3. Biotic vs. Abiotic Biotic – living Abiotic - nonliving

  4. 1. Living things have cells • A cell is a membrane-covered structure that contains all the material necessary for life. • Organisms can be made up of only one cell (unicellular) or many cells (multicellular). • In an organism with many cells, cells perform specialized functions. Ex. Nerve cells, muscle cells…

  5. Cell Theory • 1- Every living thing is made of one or more cells. • 2- Cells carry out the functions needed to support life. • 3- Cells come only from other living cells. Robert Hooke Video Clip Robert Hooke was the first to see and name a cell by looking through a microscope at cork

  6. 2. Ability to respond to the environment. • A change in an organism’s environment that affects the activity of the organism is called a stimulus. • Ex. When your pupils are exposed to light • Homeostasis- The maintenance of a stable internal environment. • Ex. When you sweat or shiver BrainPOP | Homeostasis

  7. 3. Living things Reproduce • Organisms make other organisms like themselves. • Asexual reproduction: a single parent produces offspring that are identical to the parent • Most single-celled organisms • Sexual reproduction: Two parents produce offspring that share characteristics of both parents

  8. 4. Living things have DNA • The cells of all living things contain a special molecule called DNA • The transmission of DNA from one generation to the next is called heredity. • DNA(deoxyribonucleic acid) – the genetic material found in all living cells that contains the information needed for an organism to grow, maintain itself, and reproduce

  9. 5. Living things use energy • Organisms use energy (food) to carry out the activities of life. • The sun is the original source of energy for all living things.

  10. 6. Living things grow and develop • Growth in single-celled organisms occurs as the cell gets larger. • Growth is an increase in size. • Organisms made of many cells grow mainly by increasing their number of cells. • Development is the change of form of an organism.

  11. Needs of Life • Food • Water • Air • Living Space

  12. Biology • Biology – study of living things • What is Life? (Video with Worksheet)

  13. Debate • Nature Versus Nurture • Scientists have proven that we inherit our physical characteristics from our parents (nature). They continue to research whether we inherit our personalities from our parents. Some scientists say that where we live and how we are raised are more important (nurture). What do you think is the critical factor, nurture (care) or nature (heredity)? Why?

More Related