Characteristics of Living and Non Living Things
Characteristics of Living and Non Living Things
Characteristics of Living and Non Living Things
Table of Contents
Introduction
Living things
Non-living things
Difference between living and non-living things
Criteria for differentiating living things from non-living things
Introduction
We can find many things around us, from mountains and oceans to plants and animals. The earth
in which we live is made up of several things. These “things” can be categorized into two
different types – Living and Non-living Things.
All living things breathe, eat, grow, move, reproduce and have senses.
Non-living things do not eat, grow, breathe, move and reproduce. They do not have
senses.
Living things have “life,” though some might not show its evident signs. For instance, a tree
would probably not react the same way a human would. It would not react when we hit it, and it
might not be able to walk around. Though the signs of life displayed by them are not very
observable, it does not make them non-living.
Let us have a detailed look at the important characteristics of living and non-living things and the
difference between the two.
Living things
Living things exist and are alive and are made of microscopic structures called cells. They grow
and exhibit movement or locomotion. They experience metabolism, which includes anabolic and
catabolic reactions.
Living things are capable of producing a new life which is of their own kind through the process
of reproduction. Living things have a particular life span and are not immortal.
Cellular Respiration enables living organisms to acquire energy which is used by cells to
perform their functions. They digest food for energy and also excrete waste from the body. Their
life cycle can be summarised as follows – birth, growth, reproduction and death.
Examples of living things are animals, birds, insects, and human beings.
Also Read: Living things
1. Living things exhibit locomotory motion, they move. Animals are able to move as they
possess specialized locomotory organs, for example – Earthworms move through the soil
surface through longitudinal and circular muscles. Plants move in order to catch sunlight
for photosynthesis
2. Living things respire. Respiration is a chemical reaction, which occurs inside cells to
release energy from the food. Transport of gases takes place. The food that is ingested
through the process of digestion is broken down to release energy that is utilized by the
body to produce water and carbon dioxide as by-products.
3. Living things are sensitive to touch (and other stimuli as well) and have the capability to
sense changes in their environment.
4. They grow. Living things mature and grow through different stages of development.
5. One of the striking features is that living things are capable of producing offspring of
their own kind through the process of reproduction, wherein genetic information is
passed from the parents to the offspring.
6. They acquire and fulfil their nutritional requirements to survive through the process of
nutrition and digestion, which involves engulfing and digesting the food. Some living
organisms are also autotrophic, which means they can harness the sun’s energy to make
their food (also known as autotrophs).
7. The digested food is eliminated from the body through the process of excretion.
Non-living things
Non-living things are not alive. They do not possess life. They do not have cells and do not grow
or show locomotion/movement. They do not undergo metabolism with anabolic and catabolic
reactions. They do not reproduce.
Non-living things do not have a life span. They do not respire as they do not require food for
energy and hence do not excrete. They do not fall into any cycle of birth, growth or death. They
are created and destroyed by external forces.
Examples of non-living things include stones, pens, books, cycles, bottles, etc.
1. Non-living things are lifeless. They do not have cells, and there is no protoplasm which
forms the basis for life to exist.
2. Lack of protoplasm leads means no metabolic activities.
3. They do not have a definite and certain size of their own. They take the shape of the
substance they are contained in, for example, a liquid takes the shape of its container.
Stones, rocks and boulders are moulded by the changing environment and landscape. The
change in the state of a non-living thing is due to an external influence.
4. Non-living things “grow” by accretion. It occurs through adding materials externally. For
example, A snowball may increase in size due to the accumulation of smaller units of its
own on its outer surface.
5. Non-living things never die as they do not have cells with a definite lifespan. Immortality
is a distinguishing factor.
6. Fundamental life processes such as reproduction, nutrition, excretion, etc. are absent in
non-living things.
Living things are sensitive and responsive Non-living things are not sensitive and do
to stimuli. not respond to stimuli.
Living things move from one place to Non-living things cannot move by
another. themselves.
If something obeys a few of the rules, it cannot be categorized as a living thing. It has to follow
all the given rules stringently. For example, an icicle, although it grows (increases its mass or
length), is still a non-living thing since it cannot reproduce or respond to stimuli.
Non-living things do not have any of the life processes, unlike living beings.
Class Mammalia
Order Carnivora
Family Canidae
Species familiaris
Note: in the Linnean classification system, genus and species names are
italicized. The genus name is written with a capital letter, but the species
name is not.
Each classification level is based upon a set of shared characteristics that are
common to all members of that level. Kingdoms are the broadest categories in
the Linnaean system. For example, your pet dog is in Kingdom Animalia
(multicellular and heterotrophic which means they eat other organic materials
to survive, Table 6.1).
A dog has a spinal cord of nerves along its back and particularly a solid
vertebral column (chordate) made of bone (Phylum Chordata). It is a mammal
(Class Mammalia – warm blooded, 3 middle ear bones, hair, provide milk to
their young via mammary glands) and dogs descended from meat eaters
(Order Carnivora – not all members of this Order are carnivores but they are
descended from them).
Having five toes on the front feet, four toes on the back feet and claws that do
not retract (unlike cats) makes them part of Family Canidae. At the level of
family, genus and species, it is often quite subtle things that separate one
organism from another. We could all likely use some visible features and
common sense to figure out a way to separate lions and wolves, but
separating a coyote and wolf takes more care and knowledge and will come
down to things like the size of different bones and specific shape attributes.
You just have to look at a group of people and it becomes apparent that within
a species there can be considerable variation in outward body appearance,
and so decisions must be made that separate between-species variations
from within-species variations.
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ck here to view this table as a PDF file.
Want to Know More About Variations in Classification Systems?
What does this mean for you? If you do a search on line for more information
to help you study, you will find that there are several different methods of
organizing life into kingdoms or even methods that include classification levels
above kingdoms.
In this course, we will stick to the five-kingdom system as shown in Table 9.1
of the 8th edition of the textbook.
Figure 6.2 | Fossil classification
flowchart, thumbnail view. Click here to see a larger version. Click here to download a PDF file.
There are some critical junctions in the flow chart above that require specific
fossil features to be identified. Most of these features were introduced in Lab
5, and others will be introduced with the fossils.
Colonial vs non-colonial life habit: identical individual organisms that live side
by side (colonial) vs. solitary organisms.
Symmetry: bilateral (side to side or left to right, top to bottom), radial (including
pentameral), asymmetric.
Shell coiling: planispiral (flat) or consipiral (cone shaped)
Chambered shells: shells that have internal dividers that separate parts of the
interior shell volume from each other
Non-chambered shells: shells in which there is one open space.
Other descriptions in the flow chart that discriminate between branches are
based upon the appearance of the fossil and these are best explained as we
encounter each group.