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By Carla Bridges. Why can’t you use your arm muscles to digest food?

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Presentation on theme: "By Carla Bridges. Why can’t you use your arm muscles to digest food?"— Presentation transcript:

1 By Carla Bridges

2 Why can’t you use your arm muscles to digest food?

3  You Are!!!!!!!!!!  An organism made of many cells.  Made by making more small cells, not by making cells larger.  For example: Elephant vs. human

4  Larger Size 1. Larger than single celled organisms 2. Prey for less predators 3. Wider variety of prey

5  Longer Life 1. Is not limited to the lifespan of a single cell

6  Specialization 1. Each cell has a specific job. 2. Makes organism more efficient

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8  Tissue-group of cells that work together to perform a specific job.  Material around and between the cells is also part of the tissue.

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10  Animals have four types of tissue 1. Nerve tissue 2. Muscle tissue 3. Connective tissue 4. Protective tissue

11  Plants have three types of tissue: 1. Transport tissue- moves water and nutrients through a plant 2. Protective tissue- covers the plant; helps the plant retain water, protection 3. Ground tissue- photosynthesis takes place here

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13  Organ - a structure made up of two or more tissues working together to perform a specific function

14 Has several kinds of tissue.  Muscle tissue makes food move in and through the stomach.  Special tissues make chemicals that help digest your food.  Connective tissue holds the stomach together.  Nervous tissue carries messages back and forth between the stomach and the brain.

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16  Larger Size  Longer Life  Cell Specialization

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18  Organ - a structure made up of two or more tissues working together to perform a specific function

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20  A group of organs working together to perform a particular function is called an organ system.  Each organ system has a specific job to do in the body.

21 Plants have organ systems also:  Leaf system  Stem system  Root system

22 Digestive system  Stomach and Intestines 1. Job is to break down food into small particles. 2. The rest of the body depends on the digestive system for fuel.  The digestive system depends on the respiratory and cardiovascular systems for oxygen. Cardiovascular System  Heart and Blood Vessels  Carries fuel to the rest of the body

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24  Anything that can perform life processes by itself is an organism.  2 types  Unicellular and multicellular

25 Unicellular organisms  Bacteria  Protists  Some Fungi  Live in colonies but all of the cells are single cells  Each cell must carry out all life processes to survive

26 In Contrast: Even the simplest multicellular organism has specialized cells that depend on each other for the survival of the organism.

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28  Cell  Tissue  Organ  Organ system  Organism

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30 Structure is the arrangement of parts in an organism.  Includes the shape of a part and the material of which the part is made.  Example:  The structure of the lungs is a large spongy sac.

31 Function is the job the part does  Example:  The function of the lungs is to carry oxygen to the rest of the body.  Connection;  The structure of the lungs enables them to perform a function.

32  Break into pairs according to shoe color

33 Holt Science and Technology. Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. Harcourt Education Company. Austin, Texas 2005.

34  UCP 1: Systems, order, and organization  UCP 2: Evidence, models, and explanation  UCP 5: Form and function  LS 1a: Living systems at all levels of organization demonstrate the complementary nature of structure and function. Important levels of organization for structure and function include cells, organs, tissues, organ systems, whole organisms, and ecosystems.  LS 1b: All organisms are composed of cells—the fundamental unit of life. Most organisms are single cells; other organisms, including humans, are multicellular.  LS 1d: Specialized cells perform specialized functions in multicellular organisms. Groups of specialized cells cooperate to form a tissue, such as a muscle. Different tissues are in turn grouped together to form larger functional units, called organs. Each type of cell, tissue, or organ has a distinct structure and set of functions that serves the organism as a whole.


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