jueves, 18 de enero de 2018

6º. Unit 4.LIVING THINGS

6º. Unit 4.LIVING THINGS
http://digital.bilingualbyme.com/#/resourcesBenchlist/21/4/4

 Living things are biological structures that respond to changes in the environment or within their own entities. This includes animals, plants, fungi and the single-celled organisms known as bacteria. Living things have complex biochemical organizations that allow them to process substances and utilize energy in order to respond to changes around them
 These characteristics include the ability to grow, reproduce, take in and use energy, excrete waste, respond to the environment, and possess an organized structure more complex than that of non-living things.

Characteristics of living organisms
All living organisms exhibit certain characteristics of life.
  • Living things require food
  • Living things exhibit growth
  • Living things perform respiration
  • Living things excrete
  • Livings Things move
  • Livings Things respond to stimuli
  • Livings Things Reproduce
  • Livings Things Die





http://sciencenetlinks.com/interactives/Classification.swf

 Protists

Protists are a diverse collection of organisms. While exceptions exist, they are primarily microscopic and unicellular, or made up of a single cell. The cells of protists are highly organized with a nucleus and specialized cellular machinery called organelles. 

 An Amoeba proteus, left, with a Paramecium bursaria. Amoeba can change shape and move around by extending their pseudopodia, or 'false feet.' Paramecium move by using the cilia.

Monera 

 The Monera Kingdom consists of unicellular lifeforms. Unicellular means that they only have one cell. Moneran cells are far simpler and more basic than the cells of other lifeforms. These cells have no nucleus, and are also missing many of the organelles, or parts, commonly found in other cells. For this reason, monerans are thought to be very distantly related to other lifeforms.

E.COLI BACTERIA.

Fungi

Read more at: http://www.ducksters.com/science/biology/fungi.php
This text is Copyright © Ducksters. Do not use without permission.
Fungi

Read more at: http://www.ducksters.com/science/biology/fungi.php
This text is Copyright © Ducksters. Do not use without permission.

Fungi

Fungi are a group of living organisms which are classified in their own kingdom. This means they are not animals, plants, or bacteria. Unlike bacteria, which have simple prokaryotic cells, fungi have complex eukaryotic cells like animals and plants. Fungi are found throughout the Earth including on land, in the water, in the air, and even in plants and animals. They vary widely in size from microscopically small to the largest organisms on Earth at several square miles large. There are more than 100,000 different identified species of fungi.

 Plants 

The Plantae Kingdom is made up of all the plants that you see each day. Most plants are multi-cellular, meaning that they consist of many cells. Different types of plants include trees, grass, flowers, and some types of algae.
Plants use the light from the Sun to produce their own food. This allows them to grow almost anywhere, as long as there is enough water.  
Plants get their green color from the chlorophyll which is found inside of their cells. Plants use chlorophyll to collect energy from the light of the Sun. They then use this energy to create food. In this process, they create the food we eat and the oxygen we need to breathe. Plants are very important to the life of almost every other living thing.
Animals
Like many other lifeforms, animals are multi-cellular. These cells come together, forming tissues, organs and organ systems, that help sustain the life of the animal. From elephants to snails, animals come in many shapes and sizes, and can be found all over the world. 
Animals cannot make their own food. They must rely on other living things, such as plants, fungi, and other animals to sustain them. Without other food sources, animals could not survive. 
 There are more species of animals than in all the other kingdoms combined. From worms, to blue whales, to bald eagles, animals have evolved to fit a wide variety of niches.







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