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1
Its Alive!! Or Is It?
Chapter 2
Preview
Section 1 Characteristics of Living
Things Section 2 The Necessities of Life
Concept Mapping
2
Section 1 Characteristics of Living Things
Chapter 2
Bellringer
  • What are four living and nonliving things that
    you interact with every day? How do you know
    whether each is living or nonliving? Do you know
    what the word inanimate means? If so, write out a
    definition. Does nonliving mean the same thing as
    dead? Explain your answer.
  • Write your answers in your science journal.

3
Section 1 Characteristics of Living Things
Chapter 2
Objectives
  • Describe the six characteristics of living
    things.
  • Describe how organisms maintain stable internal
    conditions.
  • Explain how asexual reproduction differs from
    sexual reproduction.

4
Section 1 Characteristics of Living Things
Chapter 2
Living Things Have Cells
  • All living things are composed of one or more
    cells.
  • Unicellular organisms made of only 1 cell
  • Multicellular organisms made of 2 or more cells
  • A cell is a membrane-covered structure that
    contains all of the materials necessary for life.
  • Some organisms are made up of only one cell and
    some are made up of trillions of cells. In an
    organism with many cells, different kinds of
    cells perform specialized functions.

5
Section 1 Characteristics of Living Things
Chapter 2
Living Things Sense and Respond to Change
  • A stimulus is anything that causes a reaction or
    change in an organism or any part of an organism.
  • Homeostasis is the maintenance of a stable
    internal environment.
  • Responding to External Change Organisms must
    respond to change in the external environment in
    order to maintain their homeostasis.

6
Section 1 Characteristics of Living Things
Chapter 2
Living Things Reproduce
  • Organisms make other organisms similar to
    themselves.
  • In sexual reproduction, two parents produce
    offspring that will share characteristics of both
    parents.
  • In asexual reproduction, a single parent
    produces offspring that are identical to the
    parent.

7
Section 1 Characteristics of Living Things
Chapter 2
Living Things Have DNA
  • The cells of all living things contain the
    molecule deoxyribonucleic acid, or DNA.
  • DNA controls the structure and function of cells.
  • The passing of traits through DNA is called
    heredity.

8
Section 1 Characteristics of Living Things
Chapter 2
Living Things Use Energy
  • Organisms use energy to carry out the activities
    of life.
  • An organisms metabolism is the total of all of
    the chemical activities that the organism
    performs.

9
Section 1 Characteristics of Living Things
Chapter 2
Living Things Grow and Develop
  • All living things, whether they are made of one
    cell or many cells, grow during periods of their
    lives.
  • Living things may develop and change as they
    grow.

10
Section 2 The Necessities of Life
Chapter 2
Bellringer
  • What do you think your mass would be if there
    were no water in your body? What else besides
    water is your body composed of? Where do you
    think you get the minerals that make up your body
    mass?
  • Record your answers in your science journal.

11
Section 2 The Necessities of Life
Chapter 2
Objectives
  • Explain why organisms need food, water, air, and
    living space.
  • Describe the chemical building blocks of cells.

12
Section 2 The Necessities of Life
Chapter 2
Water
  • Your cells and the cells of almost all living
    organisms are approximately 70 water. Most of
    the chemical reactions involved in metabolism
    require water.

Air
  • Air is a mixture of several different gases,
    including oxygen and carbon dioxide. Most living
    things use oxygen in the chemical process that
    releases energy from food.

13
Section 2 The Necessities of Life
Chapter 2
A Place to Live
  • All organisms need a place to live that contains
    all of the things they need to survive. Space on
    Earth is limited, so organisms are often in
    competition with each other.

Food
  • All living things need food. Food gives organism
    energy and the raw material needed to carry on
    life processes.

14
Section 2 The Necessities of Life
Chapter 2
Food, continued
  • Making Food Some organisms, such as plants, are
    called producers. Producers can make their own
    food by using energy from their surroundings.
  • Taking Food Other organisms are called
    consumers because they must eat (consume) other
    organisms to get food. Decomposers are consumers
    that get their food by breaking down the
    nutrients in dead organisms or animal wastes.

15
Section 2 The Necessities of Life
Chapter 2
Comparing Consumers and Producers
Click below to watch the Visual Concept.
Visual Concept
16
Section 2 The Necessities of Life
Chapter 2
Putting It All Together
  • All organisms need to break down that food in
    order to use the nutrients in it.
  • Nutrients are made up of molecules.
  • Molecules found in living things are usually
    made up of six elements carbon, hydrogen,
    nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, and sulfur.

17
Section 2 The Necessities of Life
Chapter 2
Proteins
  • Proteins are large molecules made up of amino
    acids.
  • Making Proteins Organisms break down the
    proteins in food to supply their cells with amino
    acids that are then linked together to form new
    proteins.
  • Proteins in Action Some proteins form
    structures that are easy to see. Other proteins
    help cells do their jobs. Proteins called enzymes
    start or speed up chemical reactions in cells.

18
Section 2 The Necessities of Life
Chapter 2
Carbohydrates
  • Molecules made of sugars are called
    carbohydrates.
  • Simple Carbohydrates Simple carbohydrates are
    made up of one sugar molecule or a few sugar
    molecules linked together.
  • Complex Carbohydrates Complex carbohydrates are
    made of hundreds of sugar molecules linked
    together. Organisms store extra sugar as complex
    carbohydrates.

19
Section 2 The Necessities of Life
Chapter 2
Lipids
  • Lipids are compounds that cannot mix with water.
  • Phospholipids are the molecules that form much of
    the cell membrane.
  • Fats and Oils Fats and oils are lipids that
    store energy. When an organism has used up most
    of its carbohydrates, it can get energy from
    these lipids.

20
Section 2 The Necessities of Life
Chapter 2
21
Section 2 The Necessities of Life
Chapter 2
ATP
  • Adenosine triphosphate, or ATP, is the major
    energy-carrying molecule in cells.
  • The energy in carbohydrates and lipids must
    first be transferred to ATP, which then provides
    fuel for cellular activities.

22
Section 2 The Necessities of Life
Chapter 2
Nucleic Acids
  • Nucleic acids are large molecules made up of
    subunits called nucleotides.
  • Nucleic acids are sometimes called the
    blueprints of life because they have all the
    information needed for a cell to make proteins.
  • DNA is a nucleic acid.

23
Section 2 The Necessities of Life
Chapter 2
Nucleic Acid
Click below to watch the Visual Concept.
Visual Concept
24
Its Alive!! Or Is It?
Chapter 2
Concept Mapping
Use the terms below to complete the concept map
on the next slide.
DNA sugars energy enzymes living cells proteins starches carbohydrates

25
Chapter 2
Its Alive!! Or Is It?
26
Chapter 2
Its Alive!! Or Is It?
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