Is It a Living Organism?

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Is It a Living Organism? Take out a sheet of paper and number it 1-30

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Is It a Living Organism?. Take out a sheet of paper and number it 1-30. The following slides show 30 examples of living and nonliving things. Based on the characteristics of life your group came up with, decide if each example represents a living organism. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Is It a Living Organism?

Page 1: Is It a Living Organism?

Is It a Living Organism?

Take out a sheet of paper and number it 1-30

Page 2: Is It a Living Organism?

Is It a Living Organism?

• The following slides show 30 examples of living and nonliving things.

• Based on the characteristics of life your group came

up with, decide if each example represents a living organism.

• If the object shown is a living organism, write “Yes.” • If the object shown is nonliving, write “No.”

Page 3: Is It a Living Organism?

Tree

1

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Rock

2

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Slime mold

3

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Fire

4

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River (the flowing water)

5

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Wind

6

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Rabbit

7

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Cloud

8

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Coral

9

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Feather

10

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Grass

11

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Seed

12

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Egg (unfertilized)

13

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Zygote

14

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Spore

15

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Bacteria

16

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White Blood Cell

17

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Molecule

18

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Shelf Fungus

19

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Sun

20

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Probiotic Yogurt

21

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Potato

22

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Leaf

23

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Chloroplast

24

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Butterfly

25

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Pupa

26

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Fossil

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Hibernating Bear

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Virus

29

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Mitochondria

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Answers to Is it a living organism?

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Characteristics of Living Things

1. Living things are based on a universal genetic code.2. Living things grow and develop.3. Living things respond to their environment.4. Living things are made up of cells.5. Living things reproduce6. Living things maintain a stable internal environment.7. Living things get and use material and energy.8. Taken as a group, living things evolve.

Page 35: Is It a Living Organism?

Tree

Yes1

Page 36: Is It a Living Organism?

Rock

No2

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Slime mold

Yes3

Page 38: Is It a Living Organism?

Fire

No4

Page 39: Is It a Living Organism?

River

No5

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Wind

No6

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Rabbit

Yes7

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Cloud

No8

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Coral

Yes9

Page 44: Is It a Living Organism?

Feather

No

Feathers are produced by

living cells located in

small pit-like follicles in a bird’s outer skin layer.

As it’s produced keratin is

protruded straight out

from the skin follicle,

enlarging the feather.

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Grass

Yes11

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Seed

Yes

Seeds may lay dormant for years before conditions

become favorable for germination.

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Chicken Egg (unfertilized)

No

The yellow yolk is not the egg, but food for the egg.

The egg is a tiny single haploid cell found in

the egg white.

The unfertilized egg is not capable of

reproducing or evolving.

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Zygote

Yes14

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Spore

Yes

Spores are usually haploid and

unicellular. Once conditions are

favorable, the spore can develop into a

new organism which produces

gametes.

Spores are part of the life cycle of a diploid organism.

They are every bit a living organism as the organism that produces them.

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Bacteria

Yes16

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White Blood Cell

Yes17

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Molecule

No18

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Shelf Fungus

Yes19

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Sun

No20

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Probiotic Yogurt

No21

While yogurt contains live cultures of bacteria, the yogurt itself is not alive.

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Potato

Yes

One potato can yield many plants. Just cut it into pieces so that each piece contains a bud.

Place a potato piece cut-side down in a hole, cover it with dirt and

apply water. In time, a potato plant will grow.

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Leaf

Yes

Many leaves can be cut at the stem and placed back into soil to grow new roots.

This is known as propagation. In

some cases, the stem isn’t even needed.

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Chloroplast

No

There is evidence that the ancestor of

chloroplasts was once a free-living

cyanobacterium that formed a symbiotic

relationship with another cell. This

merger is believed to have happened about

1 billion years ago.24

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Butterfly

Yes25

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Pupa

Yes26

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Fossil

No

Fossils are a remnant or trace of an

organism of a past geological age embedded and

preserved in the earth’s crust or some

natural material.

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Hibernating Bear

Yes28

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Virus

No

Although viruses have genes and can evolve,

they do not have a cellular structure.

In addition, viruses do not have their own

metabolism, and require a host cell to make new

products.29

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Mitochondria

No

There is evidence that the ancestor of

mitochondria was once a free-living

bacterium that formed a symbiotic

relationship with another cell. This

merger is believed to have happened about 2.5 billion years ago.

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