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Table of Contents. Chapter: Life's Structure and Classification. Section 1: Living Things. Section 2: How are living things classified?. Living Things. 2. Organisms vary in size—from the microscopic bacteria in mud puddles to gigantic oak trees— and are found just. about everywhere.
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Table of Contents Chapter: Life's Structure and Classification Section 1: Living Things Section 2: How are living things classified?
Living Things 2. Organisms vary in size—from the microscopic bacteria in mud puddles to gigantic oak trees— and are found just about everywhere. 1 A. What are living things like? 1. Any living thing is called an organism.
Living Things 1 A. What are living things like? 3. All organisms have some features in common. These features include cells, the ability to grow reproduce, and a need for energy.
Living Things 1 B. Living Things Are Organized 1. All living things are made of cells, smallest unit of an organism that carries on the functions of life. 2.Some organisms are composed of just one cell while others are composed of many cells. 3. Each cell has an orderly structure and contains the instructions for cellular organization and function in its hereditary material.
Living Things 1 C. Living Things Grow and Develop 1. Growth of a many-celled organism, such as a human, is mostly due to an increase in the number of cells. 2.In one-cell organisms, growth is due to an increase in the size of cell.
Living Things 1 C. Living Things Grow and Develop 3. Organisms change as they grow. All of the changes that take place during the life of an organism is called development.
Living Things 1 C. Living Things Grow and Develop 4. The length of time an organism is expected to live is its life span. 5. Some organisms have a short life span. Others have a much longer life span. 6. Some bristlecone pine trees have been alive for more than 4,600 years but a mayfly lives only one day.
Living Things 1 D. Living Things Respond • 1. Living things must interact with their surroundings. Anything that causes some change in an organism is a stimulus. 2. All living things interact with their surroundings and respond to stimuli. Often, a response results in movement. 3. An organism must respond to stimuli to carry on its daily activities and to survive.
Living Things 1 D. Living Things Respond 4. All living things maintain homeostasis, the regulation of an organism’s internal, life-maintaining condition despite changes in its environment. 5. Homeostasis is a trait of all living things.
Living Things 1 E. Living Things Use Energy 1. All living things use energy. The energy used by most organisms comes either directly or indirectly from the Sun. 2. Plants and some other organisms use the Sun’s energy, carbon dioxide, and water to make food.
Living Things 1 E. Living Things Use Energy 3. Organisms that do not get energy directly from the Sun must take in oxygen in order to release the energy in foods. 4.Some bacteria can’t use the Sun’s energy to produce food; instead, the bacteria use energy stored in some chemical compounds and carbon dioxide to make food.
Living Things 1 F. Living Things Reproduce 1. All living things reproduce to make more of their own kind. 2. Some bacteria reproduce every 20 minutes, while it might take a pine tree two years to produce seeds. 3. Without reproduction, living things would not exist to replace those individuals that die.
Living Things 1 G. What do living things need? 1. All living things need a place to live, water, and food source to survive.
Section Check 1 Question 1 A _______ is the smallest unit of an organism that carries on the functions of life.
Section Check 1 Question 2 Any living thing is called a(n) _______.
Section Check 1 Question 3 Which is the smallest unit of an organism that can carry on life functions? A. cell B. organ C. organ system D. tissue