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Introduction to Living Things. 1.2, 1.3, 1.4. Organism. Any living thing Bacteria Animals Fungi Plants Etc. Characteristics of L.T. In order to be considered alive, organisms must have these 5 characteristics: Living things are organized Living things respond to stimuli
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Introduction to Living Things 1.2, 1.3, 1.4
Organism • Any living thing • Bacteria • Animals • Fungi • Plants • Etc
Characteristics of L.T. • In order to be considered alive, organisms must have these 5 characteristics: • Living things are organized • Living things respond to stimuli • Living things use energy • Living Things grow and develop • Living things reproduce
Living things are organized • Every living thing is made up of one or more cells. • Cells=the basic unit of life • Cells contain the hereditary material, called DNA
Living things respond to stimuli • Stimulus=something that causes a change in an organism • Response= the reaction to the stimulus • Homeostasis= an organisms ability to keep proper conditions inside, no matter what is going on outside
Living things use energy • Plants, and some bacteria get energy from the sun • Animals get energy from food
Living things grow and develop • Growth=organism gets bigger • Development=Changes that take place during the lifetime • Lifespan= How long an organism is expected to live
Living things reproduce • Reproduction=making babies
Living things have 2 needs • A place to live (habitat) • Must be a place that suits the needs of the organism
What else? 2. Raw materials • ALL organisms need water to survive • Humans also need • Food • Oxygen • Plants also need • Sunlight • Carbon dioxide (plants do not need oxygen!)
Where does life come from? • Living things only come from other living things • This is called biogenesis
Carolus Linneaus • Born Carl Linne in 1707 • Looked for a way to classify organisms • Based his classification on how organisms looked • Example: All trees together, all bear-looking creatures together, all fish together, etc. • Developed Binomial Nomenclature • 2 word naming system still used today.
Binomial Nomenclature • 2 word naming system developed by Linnaeus • 1st word=genus • A group of closely related organisms • Ex. Pinus = pine trees • 2nd word=species • Tells us something about the organism • Ex. Pinus virginana
Rules for Scientific Names • First word capitalized • Second word lowercase • Both words in italics or, if handwritten, underlined Example: Homo sapiens or Homo sapiens
What is wrong with these Scientific Names? • canus familiaris • Felis Domesticus • Equus caballus
Why use scientific names? • 4 main reasons • To avoid mistakes/confusion • To show how organisms are related • Because they give us information about the organism • Allows organisms to be easily organized
1. To avoid confusion/mistakes • So we can avoid confusion/mistakes • We use some words to refer to many organisms that are actually not closely related • Black Bear & Koala Bear- • Koalas are NOT bears
2. To show how organisms are related • The first word gives us the genus, which is a related group of organisms • Canuslupis=wolf • Canusfamilaris=dog • Canuslatrans=coyote
3. The names give us some information about the organism • It may be who discovered the species, where it is found, or a feature • Nothura darwiniiCornus florida
Allow organisms to be easily organized • Organisms part of the same genus are grouped together • Phylogeny=grouping organisms based on relationships
Modern Classification • Life is broken down into categories • 3 Domains • Bacteria • Archaea • Eukarya
Kingdom • Life is broken down into categories • 6 Kingdoms • Domain Bacteria • Kingdom-Eubacteria • Domain Archaea • Kingdom-Archaea • Eukarya • Animalia • Plantae • Fungi • Protista
Eubacteria • “True” Bacteria • Single cell
Archaea • Similar to bacteria • Single cell
Animalia • Animal kingdom • Many cells
Plantae • Plant kingdom • Many cells
Fungi • Mushrooms, mold, yeast • Many cells
Protists • Mostly one cell • Most are microscopic
More classification levels • Phylum • Class • Order • Family • Genus • Species
Species • A group of organisms that can reproduce and have fertile offspring
Mnemonic for remembering levels of organization • Domain • Kingdom • Phylum • Class • Order • Family • Genus • Species • Did • King • Phillip • Come • Over • For • Great • Spaghetti
Tools for Identifying Organisms • Field Guide & Dichotomous Key • Field Guide-Pictures and descriptions of organisms
Tools for Identifying Organisms • Dichotomous Key • Detained list of characteristics that helps identify organism