Characteristics of Living Organisms Final
Characteristics of Living Organisms Final
Characteristics of Living Organisms Final
MRSGREN:
MOVEMENT.
RESPIRATION.
SENSITIVITY.
GROWTH.
REPRODUCTION.
EXCRETION.
NUTRITION.
MOVEMENT:
RESPIRATION:
Chemical reaction that breaks down food molecules in living cells to release energy.
SENSITIVITY:
The ability to detect or sense changes in the environment and to make response.
GROWTH:
The permanent increase in the size and dry mass by an increase in the number of:
cells, cell size or both.
REPRODUCTION:
EXCRETION:
Removal of toxic substances, metabolic waste and excess substances from the body
of an organism.
NUTRITION:
Taking in of nutrients which are organic substances and mineral ores, containing raw
materials or energy for growth and
tissue repair, absorbing and
assimilating them.
CLASSIFICATION
K - kingdom.
P - phylum.
C – class.
O – order.
F – family.
G – genus.
S – species.
Species:
A group of living organisms having the same characters and can breed together
successfully producing a fertile offspring.
Binomial System:
Each organism has two names written in Latin, the first name is the name of the
genus it belongs to and the second name is the name of its species. This is the
binomial system.
There are certain rules that must be followed to write the Latin name:
For example:
We humans belong to the
genus- Homo and our species is
Sapiens. So the correct
Scientific name of human is
HomoSapiens or Hsapiens.
Viruses:
Viruses are not considered as living organism, because they don’t have any of the seven
characteristics, except that they reproduce by replication only when they are inside a
living organism.
Viruses strike humans by following steps:
The viruses strike itself to a cell and injects the genetic material into it.
The viruses reproduce more of its self by replication.
The viruses keep on replicating until the cell bursts.
The new virus goes out and kills the other cells.
Protoctista:
Characteristics:
Multicellular or unicellular.
Cells have nucleus.
Cells may or may not have cell wall & chloroplast.
Some are feed by photosynthesis.
Some feed on organic substances.
Kingdom bacteria(prokaryotes):
Cell wall:
It is made of substances called peptiologlycan(sugar),which contain glycogen and
sugar.
Cell membrane:
It protects the bacterium from bursting when too much water is present.
Cytoplasm:
Its where the chromosomes are kept and it stores granules of various materials.
Slime Capsule:
Its an extra feature that is not present in all bacteria, it is created by the
bacterium when the external conditions are not favorable.
Flagellum:
This is an extra feature that is not present in all bacteria, it helps in moving and
swimming.
ADAPTATION:
Autotrophic bacteria:
They make their own food by photosynthesis.
Heterotrophic bacteria:
They are unable to make their own food so they feed on readymade food.
Kingdom Fungi:
Reproductive hyphae:
Feeding hyphae:
They form a network which grows over or through the food materials, they are called as
mycelium.
Hyphae are tube like, microscopic structure; it contains a cytoplasm which contains
glycogen granules and several nuclei:
Fungi use a process called Saprotrophic nutrition to feed its self. The hyphae secretes
enzymes which digests dead organic matter or animal waste which is then absorbed by
the hyphae to be used by fungi.
Reproduction of fungi:
At some point the fungi produce a reproductive structure, which are tiny spores which is
inside the sporangium when the spores get matured they burst out of Sporangium and
disperse to other ares and grow into a new mycelium.
Adaption:
Kingdom Plant:
Flowering Plants
Monocotyledons Dicotyledons
( Monocots) ( Dicots)
MONOCOTS DICOTS
Phylum Vertebrate.
Arthropoda.
Phylum molluscus.
Phylum hematodse.
Phylum annelids.
INVERTEBRATES PHYLUM: ARTHROPODA
Phylum Molluscus:
Phylum Nematodes:
It’s one of the most powerful and a new tool to help to work out evolutionary
relationships.
DNA is a chemical made by chromosomes.
It’s a genetic material passed from one generation to other.
Each DNA molecule is made of strings of smaller molecules which contain four
different bases i.e. A, C, G and T.
It can be arranged in any order.
Ferns:
Key: