Chapter 01 - Diversity of Life
Chapter 01 - Diversity of Life
Chapter 01 - Diversity of Life
1. Grow
• Growth in living things is the increase in size and number of
cells. All organisms grow, change and become more complex in
a process called development.
2. Respire
• Living things require energy for several life processes such as
metabolism and locomotion. Energy is stored in a chemical
called Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP) during the process of
respiration, where food is utilised.
3. Display irritability
• The ability of a living thing to respond to
changes (stimulus) in the environment is
called irritability.
4. Move
• All living things are able to move on their
own accord. Animals move to find food,
shelter or in response to their environment.
Plants are able to move parts of themselves
towards light and water.
5. Require nutrition
• Nutrients are required by all living things to obtain energy
and build new protoplasm. Plants obtain nutrients from
photosynthesis, while animals obtain nutrients by eating
other plants and animals.
6. Excrete
• Excretion – process of removing metabolic waste products
from living things.
• The importance of excretion – ensure homeostasis as the
accumulation of such waste products can be toxic and
harmful to the organism.
UNIT I LIVING ORGANISMS IN THE ENVIRONMENT
CHAPTER 1 Diversity of Life
1.1 Characteristics of Living Things
7. Reproduce
• All living things can produce new individuals, thus ensuring the
continuation of the species.
• Genetic material found in the nucleus of cells in the form of
DNA, is replicated and passed down from parent to their
offspring.
• It determines the organism’s characteristics and so the
characteristics of the parent are passed on to the offspring.
Defining a species
A species is the basic unit of classification. Members
of a single species have the following features:
• A common ancestry – they originated from an
existing species.
• Very similar genes and therefore have similar
physical, biochemical and behavioral features
• Fertile organisms and can interbreed to produce
fertile offspring.
Classifying species
• Classification is the sorting of things into groups.
Classifying species
There are two basic methods to classify living things:
• Artificial classification uses observable characteristics (e.g.
colour, size, shape or number of legs) to classify organisms.
E.g. butterflies and birds both use their wings for flight but
they originated in different ways.
Classifying species
• Natural classification is where organisms are grouped
based on shared features from their ancestors and reflect
their evolutionary descent.
(more widely used in biology)
Naming species
• Biologists follow the binomial system created by
Linnaeus.
Key Concepts
Characteristics of life
Key Concepts
Classification of living things
• Taxonomy is the study of biological classification.
Key Concepts
Classification of living things
• Organisms are grouped into different levels in a definite order:
Kingdom → Phylum → Class → Order → Family → Genus →
Species
• Organisms are identified by two names, the genus and species
name.
• There are five kingdoms which include all living organisms.
Kingdom Protoctista, Fungi, Plantae and Animalia are
eukaryotes. The fifth kingdom is Prokaryotae which includes all
the bacteria.
• Eukaryotic cells have a distinct nucleus and membrane-bound
organelles while prokaryotic cells do not.
UNIT I LIVING ORGANISMS IN THE ENVIRONMENT