LI - WALT identify what makes something living.
SC - I can identify the difference between a living object and a non-living object.
LI: Describe the 8 characteristics of all living things.
SC: Tell the differences between plants and animals by describing how they carry out each life process.
M -Movement - All living things move, even plants
R - Respiration - Getting energy from food
S - Sensitivity - Detecting changes in the surroundings
C - Cells - All living things have cells
G - Growth - All living things grow
R - Reproduction - Making more living things of the same type
E - Excretion - Getting rid of waste
N - Nutrition - Taking in and using food
Some automated robots nowadays are very lifelike in their actions and abilities: they can move, work and respond to light and sound. Would a scientist say they are "living"?
The major difference between living things and non-living things is that all living things (organisms) are made up of one or more cells. These basic units can perform all processes associated with life. Living things all show the following seven main life functions at some time:
This allows them to change their position in their environment to obtain essential requirements such as water, air and food as well as to protect themselves, or locate a mate.
Plants are slower and more limited in their movement, though a fly caught by an insectivorous (insect eating) plant might disagree!
Unlike a stone, living things cannot continue indefinitely, so they need to be able to create similar organisms to themselves to survive through time. Extinction may result if reproduction is not successful.
It is important that living things can sense, and respond to, changing factors in their environment. Information taken in through the senses is processed to allow a response which helps it to survive. For example, if you are too close to a fire, you usually back away to prevent yourself being burnt. You know whether you are too close by sensing with your eyes (you see flames), heat detectors in the skin pick up warmth, your nose picks up the smell of burning and your ears hear the crackling fire.
Similarly, plants can sense and respond to light, water and gravity.
This involves both an increase in size, and repair of damaged parts. Unlike crystals which grow only on their outer edges, living things take in nutrients, change them and then use them as building blocks wherever required throughout the organism.
All life processes require energy. The function of respiration is to release energy from food for use by the organism. This process usually requires oxygen, but not always. Plants differ from animals by being able to produce their own food, using it later as an energy source.
All life functions create wastes which must be removed from the organism or these would build up and become poisonous. In humans, these include carbon dioxide (removed via the lungs), excess salts and water (removed through the skin and the kidneys), and unused waste food (removed as faeces). Excess heat is also continuously lost from the body through the skin.
In all living things, there is a continual need to take in food for the nutrients which are required for growth, as well as energy.
The acronym MRS GREN makes these seven characteristics easier to remember.
Two other terms often confused in discussions of "living" are "dead" and "non-living".
"DEAD" implies that the object was once living.
"NON-LIVING" suggests that the object has never had the ability to carry out the life functions outlined above e.g. metals, water, air, soil.
Sometimes people doubt whether plants show the characteristics of living things but they do. Movement, sensitivity and respiration are the characteristics that are the most difficult to justify.
Plants do move as demonstrated by Sunflowers that rotate to follow the Sun and pea plant tentacles that coil around a branch.
Plants do respond to changes in their environment as their shoots grow towards light and their roots grow downwards.
Plants carry out two main chemical processes, photosynthesis and respiration. Photosynthesis is the process by which plants make their own food which is then broken down by respiration to produce energy. People often do not realise that plant cells need to make energy to keep the plant working and hence staying alive.