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Published byKelly Johnston Modified over 9 years ago
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Characteristics of Living Things 1. Made of Cells 2. Reproduce 3. Adapt 4. Respond to environment 5. Evolve 6. Use energy 7. Grow and Develop 8. Based on a Genetic Code 9. Need Materials from environment 10. Maintain internal environment
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Made of Cells Cells: membrane bound capsules that contain genetic material and carry out living functions. - Unicellular: * Bacteria, amoeba, and other organisms carry out all of the function of life as a single cell. - Multicellular: * Plants, animals, fungus, and some other organisms are made of many specialized cells that work together to carry out the functions of life.
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Reproduce Living things form new organisms through the process of reproduction. - Asexual reproduction: * Budding, self-pollination, and binary fission are all examples of asexual reproduction. - Sexual reproduction: * Pollination, spawning, and sexual intercourse are all examples of sexual reproduction.
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Adapt Adaptation: - All organisms have inherited the ability to survive in their environment, if they had not they would be extinct. * Pack hunting, nocturnal hunting, superior vision, camouflage, eyespots, mimicry, and many other characteristics are examples of adaptations.
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Respond to Environment Response: Environment: - The head of a sunflower following the sun through the sky, a bird flying south for the winter, you shivering in the cold are all responses to changes in environmental conditions.
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Evolve Evolution: - As the environment of a species changes those best adapted to the changes pass those adaptations on to their offspring resulting in changes to the genetic characteristics of the population. * Bacterial resistance to antibiotics is an example of evolution.
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Use Energy All organisms require energy to maintain organization and carry out the functions of life. - Photosynthesis: * Plants undergo photosynthesis, and store sugars in their roots, seeds, fruits and leaves. - Cellular respiration: * All living organisms use cellular respiration to release the energy in sugar. - Metabolism: * Photosynthesis and cellular respiration are metabolic reactions.
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Grow and Develop Growth: - Most organisms get by adding more cells. Development: - Many organisms, like flies, have different stages of life that they go through. ** Growth and development are metabolic processes.
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Based on Genetic code Genetic Material: - DNA: deoxyribonucleic acid, is what chromosomes and genes are made of. - RNA: ribonucleic acid, carries genetic information throughout the cell. **All living organisms contain DNA and RNA in their cells, and the genetic code is universal.
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Need materials from environment All living organisms must be able to obtain materials from their environment. - In order to grow and develop organisms must obtain nutrients and energy from their environment. * Many animals gather or hunt their food, but plants obtain energy from the sun and nutrients from their roots.
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Maintain an internal environment Homeostasis: the metabolic reactions that keep an organisms internal environment relatively stable. - Organisms must use energy to stay warm, eliminate waste, breakdown toxins, and move nutrients throughout the organism. * Warm blooded animals burn energy to produce heat so they maintain a stable body temperature, but cold blooded animals slow down their metabolism to go into a hibernation so they can survive cold temperatures.
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Viruses A Virus is a small protein capsule that contains genetic material... similar to a single chromosome surrounded by a protein shell. - Viruses cause disease in plants and animals by infecting healthy cells, and using the cells replication machinery to make more virus. * Most scientists do not consider viruses living, because they cannot grow, move, produce proteins, use energy, or reproduce on their own. * Some viruses do adapt to environmental changes very rapidly.
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Prions Prions are disease causing proteins caused by mutations in normally occurring protein segments. - Many cells contain normal prion protein segments, but when the become mutated they become misshapen. * Disease causing prions interact with other normal proteins (often in the brain) causing them to mutate and destroy nervous tissue. * The most common prion cause disease is transmissible spongiform encephalopathies or mad cow disease (Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans). - Prions carry out some functions of life, but are not considered living.
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