An action by an organism or part of an organism causing a change of position or place
Respiration
The chemical reactions in cells that break down nutrient molecules and release energy for metabolism
Sensitivity
The ability to detect and respond to changes in the internal or external environment
Growth
A permanent increase in size and dry mass
Reproduction
The processes that make more of the same kind of organism
Excretion
The removal of the waste products of metabolism and substances in excess of requirements
Nutrition
The taking in of materials for energy, growth, and development
Species
A group of organisms which can reproduce to produce fertile offspring
Sequence of classification
Kingdom
Phylum
Classes
Orders
Families
Genus
Species
Binomial System of Naming Species
The scientific name of an organism comprises two parts showing the genus and species
The classification of organisms helps show the evolutionary relationships between them
Scientists also use the DNA base sequence to help classify organisms
The similarity in DNA chains shows how closely related two organisms are
Dichotomous keys
Use visible features to classify organisms, giving a choice of two features to follow until the organism is narrowed down to its genus and species
The Five Kingdoms
Animals
Plants
Fungi
Prokaryotes
Protocists
Animals
Multicellular ingestive heterotrophs (eat living organisms)
Examples: cat, ladybird, newt
Plants
Multicellular photosynthetic autotrophic (make their own food) organism with a cellulose cell wall and chloroplasts
Examples: cactus, oak tree
Fungi
Single-celled or multicellular heterotrophic and saprotrophic organisms with cell walls not made of cellulose, spread by spreading spores in moist/dark/warm environments, most have hyphae and mycelium in structure
Examples: yeast, mushrooms
Prokaryotes
Single-celled organisms with no true nucleus or DNA in the cytoplasm, many also have plasmids
Examples: E.coli, Salmonella
Protocists
Single-celled organism with a nucleus, eukaryotes, some are multicellular
Examples: Amoeba, seaweed
Main Features of All Animals
Multicellular
Contains a nucleus but no cell walls or chloroplasts
Only feed on organic substances made by other living things
Mammals
Fur/hair on the skin
External ears (pinna)
Internal fertilisation, giving the birth of young
Mammary glands
Reptiles
Thick, dry, scaly skin
Usually four legs
Internal fertilisation, conception from egg
Soft eggs
Fish
Wet scales
Streamlined body shape
External fertilisation and soft eggs
Uses gills to breathe
Amphibians
Smooth, moist skin
External fertilisation and soft eggs
Gills & Lungs can live on land and water
Most have four legs
Birds
Feathers on body and scales on legs
Constant internal body temperature
Hard eggs
Internal fertilisation, birth through eggs
Arthropod Features
Exoskeleton
Jointed legs
Segmented body
Crustaceans
Have an exoskeleton, one pair of compound eyes
Two body segments – cephalothorax, abdomen
More than four pairs of legs (10-14 legs)
Arachnids
Two body segments – cephalothorax and abdomen
Four pairs of legs (8 legs)
Myriapods
Segmented body
One pair of antennae
10+ pairs of legs – 1 or 2 pairs on each segment
Insects
Three body segments – head, thorax and abdomen
Three pairs of jointed legs (6 legs)
One pair of antennae
1 or 2 pairs of wings
Ferns
Do not produce flowers/seeds
They are plants with roots, stems and feathery leaves
Reproduce by spores
Flowering Plants
They are plants with roots, stems and leaves
Reproduce sexually by means of flowers and seeds
Seeds are produced inside the ovary in the flower
Monocotyledons
One cotyledon/One-seed leaf
Parallel veins
Long Narrow Leaf
3 Flower Parts
Scattered Vascular Bundles
Dicotyledons
Two cotyledons/Two-seed leaf
Branching veins
Broad leaves
4 or 5 Flower Parts
Ringed Vascular Bundles
Viruses are not part of any classification system due to not being considered living things
Viruses do not carry out the seven life processes for themselves; instead, they take over a host cell's metabolic pathways to make multiple copies of themselves
Virus structure
Contains only a genetic material (RNA or DNA) inside a protein coat
Virus structure contains no mitochondria or ribosomes