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6 Kingdoms of Life. What is life? How are all living things organized?. Do not answer yet, just copy into left side. List reasons to support why this man is living. List reasons to support why this car is not living. Engage. Characteristics of Life must meet ALL to be living.
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6 Kingdoms of Life What is life? How are all living things organized?
List reasons to support why this man is living. List reasons to support why this car is not living. Engage
Characteristics of Lifemust meet ALL to be living Did you include all these in your engage answer about the man? • Made up of 1 or more cells • Metabolism • Excretion / Homeostasis • Movement • Contains Genetic material • Reproduction • Growth and Development • Response to Environment / Adapt • Evolve
How do scientists organize living things? Scientists use characteristics specific for each Kingdom to organize organisms. Using this organization, you should be able to make some generalizations based on what you know about taxonomic levels. In particular, the more levels of classification that two or more organisms share, the more similar they will be.
3 Domains – copy this not in table • Archaea and Eubacteria • unicellular • prokaryotes (no nucleus) • no membrane-bound organelles • Eukarya • more complex • most are multicellular, some unicellular • eukaryotes (have nucleus) • membrane-bound organelles
Use the following slide to fill in table. Archaebacteria live in extremely harsh environments and may represent the first cells to have evolved Make own food using H2, S or CO2 extreme environments HOT, Acidic, Salty, Anaerobic Sewage treatment plants, thermal vents, etc. Unicellular no nucleus 1 circular chromosome
Unicellular No nucleus Cell wall made up of peptidoglycan Eubacteria some cause human diseases present in almost all habitats on earth Live in the intestines of animals Many bacteria are important environmentally and commercially. Some are autotrophic but most are heterotrophs 1 Circular chromosome, no nucleus
Protista • Have DNA inside nucleus • All live in marine or freshwater • Most are unicellular • Few are multicellular • Some are autotrophic, others are heterotrophic • 3 groups • Animal-like • Plant-like • Fungus-like Fungus like protists (absorbtive heterotrophs) Animal like protists (heterotrophic) Plant like protists (autotrophic, cellulose cell walls)
Fungus • DNA inside nucleus • Multicellular, except yeast • Absorptive heterotrophs (digest food outside their body & then absorb it) • Cell walls made of chitin • Found in marine, freshwater and terrestrial environments
Plantae • DNA inside nucleus • All Multicellular • All Autotrophic • use sunlight to make glucose – Photosynthesis • Cell walls made of cellulose
Animalia • DNA inside nucleus • Multicellular • No cell walls • Ingestive heterotrophs (consume food & digest it inside their bodies) • Feed on plants or animals
Viruses are much smaller than bacteria. They are not an ancient life form. Viruses are virulent. They cause diseases like the flu or chicken pox. Most biologists agree that viruses are not alive. Viruses do not move, grow, or carry out respiration. Viruses need living host cells to reproduce. Viruses- copy this not in table
1a. Nucleus absent…go to 2 1b. Nucleus present…go to 2a. Lives in extreme environment…Archeabacteria 2b. Lives throughout earth…..Eubacteria 3a. 3b. . . . Organize the organisms in the pictures Use general characteristics in your notes Make a Dichotomous Key for Kingdoms
Matching Game All living things share characteristics. Match the squares to show your understanding of living things.