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Living Things What is Life?. Living Things Living things or organisms share important characteristics. All living things have a cellular organization,

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Presentation on theme: "Living Things What is Life?. Living Things Living things or organisms share important characteristics. All living things have a cellular organization,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Living Things What is Life?

2 Living Things Living things or organisms share important characteristics. All living things have a cellular organization, contain similar chemicals, use energy, respond to their surroundings, grow and develop, and reproduce.

3 Cellular Organization All organisms are made of small building blocks called cells. A cell is the basic unit of structure and function in an organism. Cells are so small that you need a microscope to see them.

4 Cellular Organization Unicellular, or single-celled organisms are the entire organisms. Ex. Bacteria Multicellular organisms are composed of many cells that are specialized to do certain tasks

5 Chemicals of Life All living things are composed of chemicals. The most abundant chemical is a compound called H 2 O or water. Other common chemicals are carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids.

6 Carbohydrates Carbohydrates are a cell’s main energy source. Carbohydrates are sugars.

7 Proteins Organic compounds made of amino acids. Proteins carry out many different functions in the cell.

8 Lipids Fats in the body that make hormones and store energy.

9 Nucleic Acids Nucleic acids are the genetic material that directs the cell’s activates.

10 Energy Use The cells of organisms use energy to do what living things must do.

11 Responding to Surroundings A change in an organism’s surroundings that causes the organism to react is called a stimulus (plural stimuli). Stimuli include changes in temperature, light, sound, and other factors. An organism reacts to a stimulus with a response—an action or change in behavior.

12 Growth and Development Living things grow and develop. Growth is the process of becoming larger. Development is the process of becoming a more complex organism.

13 Reproduction Producing offspring that are similar to the parents.

14 Life Comes From Life All living things come from other living things through reproduction. The idea that living things can arise from nonliving sources is called spontaneous generation.

15 Redi’s Experiment 2 jars 1 convered 1 not Found that flies came from the uncovered jar not the covered one.

16 Pasteur’s Experiment

17 Needs of Living Things All living things must satisfy their basic needs for water, food, living space, and stable internal conditions.

18 Water Organisms need water to obtain chemicals from their surroundings, break down food, grow, move substances within their bodies, and reproduce.

19 Food Food is used as a energy source. Organisms that make their own food are called autotrophs. Animals that cannot make their own food are called heterotrophs. Heterotrophs obtain energy by feeding on others.

20 Living Space All living organisms need a place to live. Organisms compete for space that is suitable to living.

21 Stable Internal Conditions Organisms must be able to keep the conditions inside their bodies stable, even when conditions in their surroundings change significantly. The maintenance of stable internal conditions is called homeostasis. Homeostasis keeps internal conditions just right for cells to function.

22 Skills Activity Designing Experiments I will give you a slice of potato. Predict what percentage of the potato’s mass is water. Then come up with a plan to test your prediction.


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