what is life? chapter 1

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What Is Life? Chapter 1 Characteristics of Living Things Life Comes From Li fe Needs of Living Th ings Living, Non-living & Dead

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What Is Life? Chapter 1. Characteristics of Living Things Life Comes From Life Needs of Living Things Living, Non-living & Dead. Characteristics of Living Things: All living things…. Are made of cells. Have the Chemicals of Life. Use Energy. Are able to grow and develop. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

What Is Life? Chapter 1

Characteristics of Living ThingsLife Comes From Life

Needs of Living ThingsLiving, Non-living & Dead

Page 2: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

Characteristics of Living Things: All living things… Are made of

cells. Have the Ch

emicals of Life.

Use Energy. Are able to g

row and develop.

Will respond to a stimulus.

Are able to reproduce.

Page 3: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

Cellular Organization Cells: The basic unit of

structure and function in an organism.

Organism: A living thing that shares all of the characteristics of living things.

Unicellular: single celled organisms (bacteria)

Multicellular: Many celled organisms

Page 4: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

Chemicals of Life Water (most abundant) Carbohydrates (energy

source) Proteins & Lipids

(building materials) Nucleic Acids (genetic

material)

Page 5: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

Carbohydrates: The main source of

energy for living things. Sugar and starch Fruits

Page 6: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

Proteins: Eggs, meat, fish, beans,

nuts and poultry. Made up of Amino Acids. Needed for the growth

and repair of body structures.

Hair and muscles. Provide energy.

Page 7: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

Nucleic Acids: The blue prints of organic

chemicals. Large compounds. Help to make proteins. DNA and RNA are Nucleic

Acids.

Page 8: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

Energy Use: Metabolism: The chemical

reactions performed by a living organism. Needed for growth, to store energy, and repair cells.

Ingestion: How a living thing takes in or produces food.

Digestion: The process of breaking down food into simpler substances.

Page 9: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

Energy continued: Respiration: The process

of a living thing taking in food to produce energy.

Excretion: The removal of waste products.

Page 10: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

Response:

Stimulus, (Stimuli: plural): The signals to which an organism reacts.

Response: The action or movement or change caused by a stimulus.

Page 11: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

Growth & Development Growth: the process of

becoming larger. Development: the

process of change that occurs during an organism’s life to produce a more complex organism.

Page 12: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

Reproduction:

Sexual Reproduction: requires two parents. Most multicellular organisms reproduce this way.

Asexual Reproduction: reproduce with only one parent. Bacteria, yeast and some plants reproduce this way.

Page 13: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

Changing an old theory: Spontaneous Generation:

Before the 1600’s people believed that life could spring from non-living things.

Francesco Redi: an Italian doctor in 1668 helped to disprove Spontaneous Generation.

Page 14: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

Louis Pasteur Mid-1800’s French Chemist Proved that Spontaneous

Generation was not true. He compared bacterial

growth in boiled and un-boiled broth.

Pasteurization

Page 15: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

Needs of Living Things:

Food Water Living Space Stable Internal Conditions

Page 16: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

Food Autotroph: a kind of living

thing that can make it’s own food. Auto means “self” and troph means “feeder”.

Heterotrophs: a kind of living thing that cannot make their own food. Hetero means “other”. They must obtain energy by feeding on others.

Page 17: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

Stable Internal Conditions Homeostasis: To maintain

a stable internal condition. Organisms must be able to keep the conditions inside their bodies stable, even when conditions in the surroundings change.

Page 18: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

Living Things: Have all 6 characteristics

of living things or have the potential to (seeds).

Cells Chemicals of Life Use Energy Respond to their

surroundings Grow and Develop Reproduce

Page 19: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

Non-living Things: Do not have all of the 6

Characteristics of living things. It may have some, but not all!

It may never have been alive (rock), OR

It may have been alive once (tree), but went through a chemical or physical process and was changed (chair).

Page 20: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

Dead: It once was alive, but no

longer is. It may still have cells or

chemicals of life, but they no longer function.

Page 21: What Is Life?   Chapter 1

The End

Created by Mrs. Scibelli

Science Explorer From Bacteria to Plants