retaa

Cards (50)

  • Mrs GREN
    Mnemonic to remember 7 characteristics of living things: Movement, Respiration, Sensitivity, Growth, Reproduction, Excretion, Nutrition
  • 7 characteristics of living things
    • Movement
    • Respiration
    • Sensitivity
    • Growth
    • Reproduction
    • Excretion
    • Nutrition
  • Movement
    Action by an organism or part of an organism causing a change of position or place
  • Respiration
    Chemical reactions in cells that break down nutrient molecules and release energy for metabolism
  • Sensitivity
    Ability to detect and respond to changes in the internal or external environment
  • Growth
    Permanent increase in size and dry mass
  • Reproduction
    Processes that make more of the same kind of organism
  • Excretion
    Removal of the waste products of metabolism and substances in excess of requirements
  • Nutrition
    Taking in of materials for energy, growth and development
  • Species
    Group of organisms that can reproduce to produce fertile offspring
  • Binomial system of naming

    Scientific name of an organism made up of genus and species, written in italics
  • Dichotomous key
    Used to identify organisms based on a series of questions about their features, branching into two choices at each step
  • Classification
    Putting things into groups to make them easier to study
  • 5 Kingdoms
    • Animals
    • Plants
    • Fungi
    • Protists
    • Prokaryotes
  • Animal cell
    • Multicellular, cells contain nucleus but no cell walls or chloroplasts, get nutrition by eating other living things
  • Plant cell
    • Multicellular, cells contain nucleus, chloroplasts and cell walls made of cellulose, get nutrition by photosynthesis
  • Fungal cell

    • Multicellular, cells have nuclei and cell walls not made of cellulose, feed by saprophytic or parasitic nutrition
  • Protist cell
    • Most are unicellular, some have cell walls and chloroplasts, some make own food by photosynthesis, some eat other living things
  • Bacterial cell

    • Often unicellular, have cell walls not made of cellulose, have cytoplasm but no nucleus or mitochondria
  • Vertebrate groups
    • Mammals
    • Birds
    • Reptiles
    • Amphibians
    • Fish
  • Mammals
    • Have fur/hair, young feed on milk, heart has 4 chambers, different types of teeth
  • Birds
    • Have feathers, lay hard-shelled eggs, have beak, have wings instead of 4 limbs
  • Reptiles
    • Have scaly skin, lay rubbery-shelled eggs
  • Amphibians
    • Have moist skin without scales, lay eggs in water, larvae have gills, adults have lungs
  • Fish
    • Live in water, have scales, have gills, have fins
  • Invertebrate groups
    • Myriapods
    • Insects
    • Arachnids
    • Crustaceans
  • Myriapods
    • Have many body segments, each with at least 1 pair of jointed legs
  • Insects
    • Have 3 body parts (head, thorax, abdomen), 3 pairs of jointed legs, 2 pairs of wings
  • Arachnids
    • Have 4 pairs of jointed legs, breathe through book lungs
  • Crustaceans
    • Have more than 4 pairs of jointed legs, breathe through gills
  • Plant groups
    • Ferns
    • Flowering plants (monocots and dicots)
  • Ferns
    • Have leaves called fronds, reproduce by spores
  • Monocots
    • Have branching root system, parallel leaf veins, flower parts in multiples of 3
  • Dicots
    • Have taproot system, branching leaf veins, flower parts in multiples of 4 or 5
  • Viruses are not considered living things as they cannot carry out life processes on their own, they can only replicate inside living cells
  • Virus
    Genetic material surrounded by a protein coat, not made of a cell
  • Biological Molecules
    • Carbohydrates
    • Fats and Oils
    • Proteins
  • Carbohydrates

    Made from Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen (CHO)
  • Fats and Oils
    Made from Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen (CHO)
  • Proteins

    Made from Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen and sometimes Sulfur (CHON{S})