What is life?.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What Is Life? Chapter 1 Characteristics of Living Things
Advertisements

What is life?.
Topic: What is Life?.
What is life? Prentice Hall: Life Science (2005), pp
Cells: The Building Blocks of Life Section 1-1 What is Life?
What Is Life? 5.1.
Living Things Chapter 2.
Characteristics of Living Things
What Is Life? Study guide. What characteristics do all living things share? Where do living things come from? What do living things need to survive?
What is Life? 7th Grade Biology Ms. Mudd
What is Life?.
The Characteristics of Life What does it mean to be alive? What is the name of the science that studies living or once living organisms? BIOLOGY.
I can…explain the experiments that prove “Life comes from Life” Get out your homework to be checked. Write down tonight’s homework. Warm Up: What are the.
Living vs. Nonliving 6 Characteristics of Living Things.
Cells: The Building Blocks of Life What is Life?.
Chapter 2 Living things.
What is Life?. All living things share 6 important characteristics: 1.Cellular Organization: Cells: The basic unit of structure and function in an organism.
Chapter 4: Section I: Pages What is Life?
What is Life? Objectives: 1. List the characteristics of living things 2. Explain where living things come from 3. Identify what all living things need.
What is Life? Characteristics of Living Things. Warm Up  I can… explain the 6 characteristics of life.  Write down your hw!  Warm up: Looking back.
Any living thing is an organism What makes a living thing a living thing?
Key concepts: What characteristics do all living things share? Where do living things come from? What do living things need to survive?
WHAT IS LIFE? Pages Organisms: living things, like the ones shown here are very different, but they all share 6 of the same characteristics.
What is Life? CharacteristicsOf Living Things. Organisms Any living thing Any living thing.
Characteristics of Life Six Characteristics all living things share.
Chapter 2-1.  Cellular organization – all organisms are made up of cells.  Unicellular = 1 cell or multicellular = many cells  Chemicals of life 
Characteristics of Life. All living things share some basic properties  Cells  Organization  Energy Use  Homeostasis  Growth and Development  Reproduction.
What is Life? Lisa Fletcher Sept Bell Ringer: Sept. 8, 2015  Compare and Contrast Inferring and Predicting.  Provide one example for each.
Chapter 2 Living things. Warm-Up: Please have a seat and take your LROD paper out. Write the HW in your planner Learning Goal(s): Identify and describe.
Introduction to Life Science What is Life? What Characteristics do all Living Things Share? 1.All living things have a cellular organization. A cell.
What is life?. Characteristics of Living Things Cellular Organization Contain similar chemicals Use energy Grow and develop Reproduce Respond to their.
2-1 What is Life? 6 Characteristics of Living Things Living things all have cellular organization, contain similar chemicals, use energy, grow and develop,
The Characteristics of Living Things  Biologists use six characteristics to classify something as a living thing. 1. Have a cellular organization 2.
Characteristics of Living Things Tell me what you know about characteristics and what you know about living things.
Living Things What is Life?. Living Things Living things or organisms share important characteristics. All living things have a cellular organization,
Characteristics of Life. What do ALL Living things share? Cells – Unicellular – Multicellular Chemicals of life – Most Abundant is water Energy Response.
C HARACTERISTICS OF ALL ORGANISMS. It is essential for students to know the characteristics that separate living organisms from non-living things. All.
Quiz on Chapter 1, Lesson 1 and Scientist’s Experiments Quiz Date: Wednesday, October 21 st.
Characteristics of Living Things. What is an organism?  An organism is any living thing.
NOTES: Characteristics of Living Things WWhat are the 6 characteristics of living things? SSummarize each of the characteristics and list any important.
Classification of Living Things
What is life?.
Introduction to Living Things
Introduction to Life Science
The Building Blocks of Life
What am I learning. What are the characteristics of living things
Introduction to Life Science
Introduction to Life Science
Introduction to Life Science
Six Characteristics of Living Things
What is Life? Living Things Unit
Characteristics of Living Things
What is Life?.
Organisms (Characteristics & Needs) Study Pack #2
Today’s Agenda… 4-11 Bellringer: Moon Phases Notes on Living Things
Characteristics of Living Things
Characteristics of Living Things
Characteristics of Living Things
Characteristics of Living Things
Life Comes From Life Notes 2.1c.
Essential Question: How are Living Things alike yet Different?
Chapter 2 – Living Things
Characteristics of Living Things
Windup Toy Alive Not alive.
Characteristics of Living Things
Chapter 2 Section 1: What is life?
Characteristics of Living Things
Characteristics of Living Things
Characteristics of Living Things
Characteristics of living things
Presentation transcript:

What is life?

With your neighbor, make a list of as many living things that you can think of. What do they all have in common?

SIX Characteristics of Living Things Cellular organization Growth and development Reproduction Responds to Stimuli Homeostasis Energy

#1 Cellular Organization All organisms are made of cells Cell is basic unit of structure and function in an organism Unicellular – single-celled organism, bacteria Multicellular – many cells that are specialized to do specific tasks

#2 Growth and Development Growth – process of becoming bigger Development – develop change over time (mature)—or get more complex

#3 Reproduction Living organisms can reproduce and produce offspring that are similar to the parents

#4 Response to Surroundings Living organisms respond to stimuli Examples: temperature, light, sound The factor that causes the organism to react is called a stimulus. The reaction an organism has is called the response.

#5 Homeostasis All living things maintain stable internal conditions Cells need certain conditions to function properly There is a limit to the amount of change that can occur in an organism Examples What happens when you get hot?

#3 Energy Use Cells must use energy to carry out their everyday activities Repair injuries, muscles moving, transport The ultimate source of energy is the sun

Life comes from Life Living things arise from living things through reproduction. Hundreds of years ago, people believe in spontaneous generation – the idea that living things could arise from nonliving

Redi’s experiment Italian doctor in the 1600s, Francesco Redi Flies do not spontaneously arise from decaying meat

Pasteur’s Experiment French chemist Louis Pasteur, mid 1800s Showed that new bacteria appeared in broth only when they were produced by existing bacteria

All living things need water to survive. Your own body is about 66% water. Water in your blood helps transport food, and chemicals to your cells.   It helps remove waste products from your body. Water is used to cool you down, to warm you up, and to carry out the chemical reactions that allow you to move and grow.

Organisms use food as their energy source Consumers: Cannot make their own food Heterotrophs Producers: Produce own food through photosynthesis Autotrophs   The food organisms take in provides them with energy, and raw materials they need to: build their bodies grow repair damage

Habitat A home A place to live where they can find Food, water and shelter

How do living things maintain homeostasis? All organisms need to maintain a stable internal environment called homeostasis. How do living things maintain homeostasis? When your body temperature begins to rise, what happens? You begin to sweat. Sweating is your bodies way of cooling down, and thus maintaining homeostasis