Characteristics and Classification of Living Things

“Characteristics of Living Things

  • Movement: An action that changes position.

  • Respiration: Chemical reactions releasing energy from nutrient molecules.

  • Sensitivity: Detecting and responding to environmental changes.

  • Growth: Permanent increase in size and dry mass.

  • Reproduction: Producing more organisms of the same kind.

  • Excretion: Removal of toxic waste.

  • Nutrition: Feeding on or making food.

Classification of Living Things

  • Sorting organisms by common features for identification, grouping, and naming.

  • Based on similarities in:

    • Physiology (body parts)

    • Morphology (structural features)

    • Ecology

    • Genetics (DNA + RNA)

  • Classification hierarchy:

    • Domain

    • Kingdom

    • Phylum

    • Class

    • Order

    • Family

    • Genus

    • Species

  • Mnemonic: Katy Perry Came Over For Good Songs

Kingdoms

  • Animal

  • Plant

  • Bacteria

  • Fungus

  • Protista (Algae and Protozoa)

Cells

  • The smallest unit of life performing essential processes.

  • Made of organelles.

  • Characteristics vary by kingdom.

  • Combine to form different body parts (e.g., heart muscle cell forming heart tissue).

Common Features in All Cells

  • Cell membrane: Controls entry and exit of substances.

  • Cytoplasm: Contains organelles.

  • Genetic material (RNA/DNA): Contains organism information.

  • Ribosomes: Make proteins.

Examples of Typical Cells

  • Animal cell: Contains centrioles, cell membrane, vacuole, ribosomes, endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondrion, nucleus, nucleolus, chromosomes.

  • Plant cell: Contains vacuole, chloroplast, ribosomes, cell wall, plasma membrane, plasmodesma.

  • Bacteria cell (bacillus type): Contains cytoplasm, cell wall, chromosome, ribosomes, 11cell wall, plasma membrane, pili, capsule, mesosome, flagella.

Bi-Nominal Nomenclature

  • Scientific naming in Latin to avoid confusion and show neutrality.

  • Format:

    • Genus (capitalized) + species (not capitalized)

    • Italicized when written

    • Example: Cannis lupus (dog)

Examples

  • Tiger: Panthera tigris

  • Lion: Panthera leo

Closeness of Living Things

  • Scientific names indicate relatedness.

  • Organisms in the same genus are closely related and likely share a common ancestor.

Domains

  • Broadest classification.

Eukaryotes

  • Cells with a nucleus.

Prokaryotes

  • Cells without a nucleus.

Prokaryotic Cell

  • Contains nucleoid, cytoplasm, cell wall, plasma membrane, flagella.

Eukaryotic Cell

  • Contains nucleus, cytoskeleton, plasma membrane, nucleolus, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, vesicle.

Kingdom Bacteria

  • Single-celled microorganisms found everywhere.

  • Prokaryotic.

Structure

  • Cell Wall: Made of peptidoglycan (glycogen and sugars).

  • Cell Membrane: Protects from bursting and provides shape.

  • Cytoplasm: Contains chromosomes and stores materials.

  • Nucleic acid: Single DNA strand (no nucleus).

  • Flagellum: For movement (not always present).

  • Ribosomes: For protein synthesis.

Kingdom Protista (Eukaryote)

  • Simple eukaryotic organisms.

  • Mostly unicellular, some multicellular (algae).

  • Have membrane-bound nucleus and endomembrane systems.

  • Mitochondria for respiration, chloroplasts for photosynthesis (algae).

Characteristics

  • Movement: Flagella or cilia.

  • Respiration: Primarily aerobic, some anaerobic.

  • Nutrition: Heterotrophic (eats other organisms) or autotrophic (makes own food).

Protist Cells

  • Algae (plant-like): Autotrophic, contains chloroplast, nucleus, nucleolus, flagellum, photoreceptor, contractile vacuole, polysaccharides.

  • Protozoa (animal-like): Heterotrophic, contains nucleus, food particle, flagellum, cytoplasm, pellicle, mitochondrion, endoplasmic reticulum.

Kingdom Fungi

  • Multicellular (except yeast).

  • Made of hyphae (microscopic threads).

Types of Hyphae

  • Reproductive hyphae: Form spores for reproduction.

  • Feeding hyphae: Form mycelium network.

  • Mainly decomposers.

  • Cell walls made of chitin.

Hyphae

  • Tube-like, contains cytoplasm, glycogen granules, and nuclei.

  • Lacks chloroplasts and starch granules.

  • Surrounded by a chitin wall.

  • Mycelium: Branching network of hyphae.

How Fungi Eat

  • Hyphae secrete enzymes to digest organic matter, then absorb the nutrients.

Kingdom Animalia

  • Multicellular.

  • Heterotrophic (consume food).

  • Typically reproduce sexually.

  • Cells lack cell walls.

  • Capable of motion.

  • Respond to external stimuli (nerve cells, muscle tissue).

Animal Cell

  • Contains nucleus, DNA, mitochondrion, Golgi complex, endoplasmic reticulum, lysosome, cytoplasm, ribosome, vacuole, peroxisome, cell membrane, centriole.

Animal Phylum

  • Vertebrate (backbone)

  • Invertebrates (no backbone)

Classes of Vertebrates

  • Fish

  • Amphibia

  • Reptiles

  • Birds

  • Mammals

Characteristics Table:

Characteristic

Fish

Amphibia

Reptiles

Birds

Mammals

Body Cover

Scales

Moist Skin

Dry Scales

Feathers

Fur/Hair

Number of limbs

2 fins, 1 tail

4 limbs

4 limbs

4 limbs

4 limbs

Blood type

Cold Blooded

Cold Blooded

Cold Blooded

Warm Blooded

Warm Blooded

Reproduction

Lay Eggs

Lay Eggs

Lay Eggs

Lay Eggs

Give Birth

Extra info

Live in water,Tail helps Moves frwrd,Fins change direction

Live on land And water,Lay water-Proof shell eggs

moves forward

Lay eggs With hard Shell. Have Beaks.

Have ear Pinna. Young feed On mother Milk.

Warm Blooded Animals

  • Maintain constant body temperature by generating or releasing heat.

  • Convert food into energy to generate heat.

Cold Blooded Animals

  • Body temperature matches the environment.

  • Activity levels depend on environmental temperature.

Arthropods (Invertebrates)

  • Exoskeleton, segmented bodies, bilateral symmetry, and jointed legs.

  • Includes Crustaceans, Arachnids, Myriapods, and Insects (C.A.M.I).

Features of Arthropods

class

Main Features

Examples

Myriapods

Many segments, at least 1 pair of jointed legs per segment

Centipede

Insects

1 pair of antennae, 3-part body, 3 pairs of legs, 2 pairs of wings

Butterfly

Arachnids

2-part body, 4 pairs of legs, no antennae

Spider

Crustaceans

More than 4 pairs of legs, chalky exoskeleton, breathe through gills, 2 pairs of antennae

Crab

Kingdom Plantae

  • Multicellular organisms.

  • Photosynthesis: Making sugars from water and carbon dioxide using sunlight.

  • Contain chlorophyll (green pigment).

  • Autotrophic (make own food).

  • Plant cells contain a large vacuol 1e, a nucleus, chloroplasts, and a cellulose cell wall.

Plant Cell

  • Contains endoplasmic reticulum, nucleus, Golgi apparatus, mitochondrion, cytosol, chloroplast, cell wall, cell membrane, tonoplast, vacuole, cell sap.

Kingdom Characteristics Table

Kingdom

Cell type

Cell structure

Body type

Nutrition

Example

Eubacteria

Prokaryotic

Cell wall, peptidoglycan

Unicellular

Autotrophic/heterotrophic

Enterobacteria/Spirochetes

Archae-bacteria

Prokaryotic

Cell wall, no peptidoglycan

Unicellular

Autotrophic/heterotrophic

Methanogens/Halophiles

Protista

Eukaryotic

Mixed

Unicellular/multicellular

Autotrophic/heterotrophic

Amoebas/Euglena/Kelps

Fungi

Eukaryotic

Cell wall, chitin

Unicellular/multicellular

Heterotrophic

Yeasts/Mushrooms

Plantae

Eukaryotic

Cell wall, cellulose

Multicellular

Autotrophic

Ferns/Pine trees

Animalia

Eukaryotic

No cell wall

Multicellular

Heterotrophic

Birds/Earthworms

The Virus

  • Not classified into a kingdom because it is not considered a living organism as they cannot reproduce on their own.

  • Very small (measured in nanometers).

  • Visible only with an electron microscope.

  • Has a protein coat and genetic material (RNA or DNA).

Why Viruses Are Not Considered Living

  • Lack most of the seven characteristics of life, except reproduction (inside a host cell).

  • Have DNA and a protein coat instead of a cell wall/membrane.

Virus Structure

  • Contains nuclear envelope, protein coat/capsid, DNA/RNA

Cladistics

  • Modern evolutionists compare nitrogenous bases within organisms to determine evolutionary relationships.

  • Represented by a cladogram.

  • Distance indicates DNA difference (less distance = closer relationship).

Example: Evolution of Modern Elephants

  • Timeline: Eocene (~56-34 mya), Oligocene (~34-23 mya), Miocene (~23-5.3 mya), Pliocene (~5.3-2.6 mya), Pleistocene (2.6 million-11,700 years ago), Holocene (11,700 years ago to present).

  • Species: Gomphotherium, woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), Asian elephant (Elephas maximus), African savanna elephant (Loxodonta africana), American mastodon (Mammut americanum), African forest elephant (Loxodonta cyclotis).