Properties of Life [BIOLOGY]

Cards (11)

  • Properties of Life
    • Order or Organization
    • Reproduction
    • Growth and Development
    • Response to Stimulus from the Environment or Irritability
    • Energy Processing or Metabolism
    • Regulation or Homeostasis
    • Evolutionary Adaptation
  • Order or Organization

    Life is characterized by highly ordered structures.

    All organisms are composed of cells – the structural and functional unit of life. Even very simple, single-celled organisms are remarkably complex: inside each cell, atoms make up molecules; which in turn make up cell organelles and other components of the cell.

    In multicellular organisms, similar cells make up tissues and in turn, tissues collaborate to create organs (body structures with distinct functions). Together, these organs work together forming organ systems.
  • Reproduction

    Organisms reproduce their own kind. Cellular mechanisms are in place in order for any two different organisms to not be able to reproduce at random.

    Single-celled organisms reproduce first by replicating their DNA. These then divide equally as cells prepare to divide to form two new cells. Multicellular organisms produce through specialized reproductive germ cells that form new individuals. When reproducing, genes containing DNA are passed along to the offspring. These genes ensure that the offspring belongs to the same species and will have similar characteristics.
  • Growth and Development

    Inherited information in the form of DNA controls how organisms grow and develop as they mature. All organisms follow specific instructions coded by their genes. The genes provide instructions that direct cellular growth and development, ensuring that the young will grow up to exhibit the same characteristics as their parents.
  • Response to Stimulus from the Environment or Irritability

    All living beings respond to their environment. For example, plants grow toward a light source, climb up fences and walls, and even respond to touch. Tiny bacteria can move toward or away from chemicals (a process called chemotaxis) or light (phototaxis). The movement towards a stimulus is considered a positive response while moving away from it is a negative response.
  • Energy Processing or Metabolism

    Organisms take in energy to drive all their activities. It is the sum of the chemical activity of all body functions. Some organisms capture energy directly from the sun and convert it into chemical energy; others use chemical energy in molecules they take in as food.
  • Regulation or Homeostasis

    Organisms have different mechanisms in order to maintain a beneficial internal environment. Even the smallest organisms are complex and require multiple regulatory mechanisms to coordinate internal functions, respond to stimuli, and cope with environmental stresses. Two examples of internal functions regulated in an organism are nutrient transport and blood flow
  • Regulation or Homeostasis

    Organs (groups of tissues working together) perform specific functions, such as carrying oxygen throughout the body, removing wastes, delivering nutrients to every cell, and cooling the body. In order to function properly, cells need to have appropriate conditions such as proper temperature, pH, and appropriate concentration of diverse chemicals. These conditions may, however, change from one moment to the next.
  • Regulation or Homeostasis

    Organisms are able to maintain internal conditions within a narrow range almost constantly, despite environmental changes, through homeostasis (literally, “steady-state”), the ability of an organism to maintain constant internal conditions.
  • Evolutionary Adaptation

    Adaptations of organisms to their environment evolve as traits that help individuals survive are passed over time. Adaptations help organisms survive in their ecological niches, and adaptive traits may be structural, behavioral, or physiological; as such, adaptations frequently involve other properties of organisms such as homeostasis, reproduction, and growth and development.
  • Evolutionary Adaptation

    As a population of organisms interacts with the environment, individuals with traits that contribute to reproduction and survival in that particular environment will leave more offspring. Over time those advantageous traits (called adaptations) will become more common in the population. This process, which changes over time, is called evolution, and it is one of the processes that explain the diverse species seen in biology.