Jan 18, 2018
Characteristics of Living Things
•The word BIOLOGY means “the study of life.”
•Biology seeks to understand the living world.
•Biology is part of everyday life. We are alive, and it is important to study the living world around us.
Some jobs involving biology: •Medicine•nutrition •pharmaceutical development•veterinary medicine•environmental science
1. They are made of cells• A cell is the smallest unit of an
organism. • Some living things are made of
just one cell (single-celled) and are referred to as unicellular (bacteria)
• Things that are made up of two or more cells are referred to as multicellular
2. They reproduce• Asexual reproduction: a single parent produces an entirely
new organism. The new organism is genetically identical to the parent (a clone)
• Sexual reproduction: the genetic material from two parents combine to produce a new organism.
Characteristics of Living Things:
3. They have a universal genetic code • Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA)
– Carries genetic information
4. They grow and develop• All cells grow and divide. • Organisms undergo changes
in size and development.
5. They respond to their environment• An organism must be able to detect and respond to stimuli in
their environment.• Stimulus: a signal to which an organism responds• External stimuli: stimuli that come from the environment
(EX. weather)• Internal stimuli: stimuli from within the organism (EX.
hunger)
6. They obtain and use energy• To grow, develop, and do
everyday function—an organism needs energy.
• Metabolism: how an organism builds-up or breaks-down materials and extracts the energy.
7. They maintain a stable internal environment
• Homeostasis: maintaining a stable internal environment, mainly involving internal feedback. (EX. when it is hot, you sweat so your body temperature does not reach a dangerous level)
8. They change over time• Over hundreds of thousands of years, organisms
are constantly evolving and changing to adapt to the changes in their environments.
molecules > cells > tissues > organism > population >
community > ecosystem > biosphere
Levels of Biological Organization
Atoms
Molecules
Organelles
Cells
Tissues
Organs
System
Ecosystems
Organism
Population
Communities
Levels of Biological
Organization
2. Cells: smallest function unit of life (EX. animal cell)
3. Tissues: a combination of cells designed to do a specific function (EX. liver tissue)
1. Molecules: groups of atoms. The smallest unit of chemical compounds (EX. DNA, water)
4. Organism: one living thing (EX. one single frog)
5. Population: one group of the same organism that live in a certain area (EX. lots of frogs)
6. Community: various populations that live in the same area (EX. crayfish the frogs, and the crickets, and the pond lilies, and the)
7. Ecosystem: the community and its living AND non-living surroundings (EX. the frogs, and the crickets, and the pond lilies, and the crayfish, and the stream they live in, and the rocks, and the air)
8. Biosphere: the part of the Earth that contains all the ecosystem. (EX. the world)