Ever wondered what actually makes something alive? It's trickier than... Show more
The Key Characteristics of Living Things








What Makes Something Alive?
You might think it's obvious what's alive and what isn't, but biology has strict rules about this. To be classified as a living organism, something must show all 8 fundamental characteristics - not just one or two.
Here's the complete list you need to memorise: Organisation, Nutrition, Excretion, Response, Reproduction, Growth, Movement, and Respiration. Think of these as biology's checklist for life.
Metabolism underlies all of these - it's basically the sum of all chemical reactions happening inside an organism. Without metabolism, none of the other characteristics work properly.
Quick Tip: Create your own acronym using the first letters to help remember all eight characteristics!

Organisation: How Life is Structured
Living things aren't just random collections of stuff - they're incredibly organised. The cell is the basic unit of all life, and from there, things get more complex.
Unicellular organisms (like bacteria) are made of just one cell that does everything. Multicellular organisms (like you!) are made of millions of specialised cells organised in a clear hierarchy.
The hierarchy goes: Cell → Tissue → Organ → Organ System → Organism. Think of it like this: your individual muscle cells group together to form muscle tissue, which combines with other tissues to create your heart, which works with blood vessels to form your circulatory system.
Real-World Connection: Your body is like a perfectly organised city where every cell has a specific job and knows exactly where it belongs!

Nutrition: Getting Energy to Survive
All living things need energy and materials to keep going, but they get them in different ways. Autotrophs (like plants) are the ultimate self-sufficient organisms - they make their own food through photosynthesis.
Heterotrophs (like animals and fungi) can't make their own food, so they have to consume other organisms. That rabbit munching grass? It's a heterotroph getting energy from an autotroph.
The basic photosynthesis equation you need to know is: 6CO₂ + 6H₂O → C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂. Plants literally turn carbon dioxide and water into sugar using sunlight - pretty amazing stuff!
Exam Tip: Remember "auto" means self and "hetero" means other - this makes the terms much easier to remember!

Excretion: Getting Rid of Waste
Here's where loads of students get confused - excretion is NOT the same as egestion. Excretion is removing waste products that come from metabolism inside your cells.
When you breathe out carbon dioxide or wee out urea, that's excretion - these are actual waste products from chemical reactions in your body. But when you go to the toilet to get rid of undigested food, that's egestion, not excretion.
Plants excrete too! They get rid of oxygen (a waste product of photosynthesis) through their stomata. One organism's waste is often another's treasure.
Don't Get Caught: Never say faeces are an example of excretion - that's egestion and will lose you marks!

Response and Reproduction: Reacting and Creating
Response (also called irritability) is how organisms detect and react to changes. A stimulus causes a response - like how your pupils shrink in bright light or how plants grow towards sunlight (phototropism).
Reproduction keeps species alive by creating new individuals. Asexual reproduction involves one parent making identical copies (clones), like bacteria splitting in two. Sexual reproduction involves two parents, creating offspring with mixed genes and variation.
Both types have advantages: asexual is quick and efficient, while sexual creates genetic diversity that helps species adapt to changes.
Memory Hack: Think of sexual reproduction as "mixing genes for survival" and asexual as "quick copying when conditions are good"!

Growth, Movement, and Respiration: The Final Three
Growth means a permanent increase in size or complexity through cell division (mitosis). It's not just getting bigger - it's becoming more complex too.
Movement isn't just running around - plants move by growing towards light (phototropism) or having their roots grow downwards due to gravity (geotropism). Even sunflowers track the sun across the sky!
Respiration is the big one students mess up. It's NOT breathing! Respiration is the chemical reaction that breaks down glucose to release energy (ATP) for cells. Breathing just gets oxygen to your cells so respiration can happen.
Exam Alert: Aerobic respiration uses oxygen and releases lots of energy. Anaerobic respiration doesn't use oxygen but releases much less energy.

Putting It All Together: What Counts as Life?
Now you can use these characteristics to determine what's actually alive. A dog shows all eight characteristics - it's definitely living. A car might seem organised and move, but it doesn't have cells, doesn't reproduce, and doesn't respire.
Viruses are the tricky ones - they're on the borderline. They have organisation and can reproduce, but only inside host cells. They don't have their own metabolism or cells, so for your exams, they're considered non-living.
Remember: an organism must show ALL eight characteristics to be considered truly alive. Miss even one, and it doesn't make the cut.
Final Reminder: Know examples of each characteristic for both plants and animals - this is guaranteed exam material!
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The Key Characteristics of Living Things
Ever wondered what actually makes something alive? It's trickier than you might think! Biology is all about studying life, but first we need to nail down exactly what counts as "living" - and there are 8 specific characteristics that every... Show more

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What Makes Something Alive?
You might think it's obvious what's alive and what isn't, but biology has strict rules about this. To be classified as a living organism, something must show all 8 fundamental characteristics - not just one or two.
Here's the complete list you need to memorise: Organisation, Nutrition, Excretion, Response, Reproduction, Growth, Movement, and Respiration. Think of these as biology's checklist for life.
Metabolism underlies all of these - it's basically the sum of all chemical reactions happening inside an organism. Without metabolism, none of the other characteristics work properly.
Quick Tip: Create your own acronym using the first letters to help remember all eight characteristics!

Sign up to see the content. It's free!
- Access to all documents
- Improve your grades
- Join milions of students
Organisation: How Life is Structured
Living things aren't just random collections of stuff - they're incredibly organised. The cell is the basic unit of all life, and from there, things get more complex.
Unicellular organisms (like bacteria) are made of just one cell that does everything. Multicellular organisms (like you!) are made of millions of specialised cells organised in a clear hierarchy.
The hierarchy goes: Cell → Tissue → Organ → Organ System → Organism. Think of it like this: your individual muscle cells group together to form muscle tissue, which combines with other tissues to create your heart, which works with blood vessels to form your circulatory system.
Real-World Connection: Your body is like a perfectly organised city where every cell has a specific job and knows exactly where it belongs!

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- Access to all documents
- Improve your grades
- Join milions of students
Nutrition: Getting Energy to Survive
All living things need energy and materials to keep going, but they get them in different ways. Autotrophs (like plants) are the ultimate self-sufficient organisms - they make their own food through photosynthesis.
Heterotrophs (like animals and fungi) can't make their own food, so they have to consume other organisms. That rabbit munching grass? It's a heterotroph getting energy from an autotroph.
The basic photosynthesis equation you need to know is: 6CO₂ + 6H₂O → C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂. Plants literally turn carbon dioxide and water into sugar using sunlight - pretty amazing stuff!
Exam Tip: Remember "auto" means self and "hetero" means other - this makes the terms much easier to remember!

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- Access to all documents
- Improve your grades
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Excretion: Getting Rid of Waste
Here's where loads of students get confused - excretion is NOT the same as egestion. Excretion is removing waste products that come from metabolism inside your cells.
When you breathe out carbon dioxide or wee out urea, that's excretion - these are actual waste products from chemical reactions in your body. But when you go to the toilet to get rid of undigested food, that's egestion, not excretion.
Plants excrete too! They get rid of oxygen (a waste product of photosynthesis) through their stomata. One organism's waste is often another's treasure.
Don't Get Caught: Never say faeces are an example of excretion - that's egestion and will lose you marks!

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- Access to all documents
- Improve your grades
- Join milions of students
Response and Reproduction: Reacting and Creating
Response (also called irritability) is how organisms detect and react to changes. A stimulus causes a response - like how your pupils shrink in bright light or how plants grow towards sunlight (phototropism).
Reproduction keeps species alive by creating new individuals. Asexual reproduction involves one parent making identical copies (clones), like bacteria splitting in two. Sexual reproduction involves two parents, creating offspring with mixed genes and variation.
Both types have advantages: asexual is quick and efficient, while sexual creates genetic diversity that helps species adapt to changes.
Memory Hack: Think of sexual reproduction as "mixing genes for survival" and asexual as "quick copying when conditions are good"!

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Growth, Movement, and Respiration: The Final Three
Growth means a permanent increase in size or complexity through cell division (mitosis). It's not just getting bigger - it's becoming more complex too.
Movement isn't just running around - plants move by growing towards light (phototropism) or having their roots grow downwards due to gravity (geotropism). Even sunflowers track the sun across the sky!
Respiration is the big one students mess up. It's NOT breathing! Respiration is the chemical reaction that breaks down glucose to release energy (ATP) for cells. Breathing just gets oxygen to your cells so respiration can happen.
Exam Alert: Aerobic respiration uses oxygen and releases lots of energy. Anaerobic respiration doesn't use oxygen but releases much less energy.

Sign up to see the content. It's free!
- Access to all documents
- Improve your grades
- Join milions of students
Putting It All Together: What Counts as Life?
Now you can use these characteristics to determine what's actually alive. A dog shows all eight characteristics - it's definitely living. A car might seem organised and move, but it doesn't have cells, doesn't reproduce, and doesn't respire.
Viruses are the tricky ones - they're on the borderline. They have organisation and can reproduce, but only inside host cells. They don't have their own metabolism or cells, so for your exams, they're considered non-living.
Remember: an organism must show ALL eight characteristics to be considered truly alive. Miss even one, and it doesn't make the cut.
Final Reminder: Know examples of each characteristic for both plants and animals - this is guaranteed exam material!
We thought you’d never ask...
What is the Knowunity AI companion?
Our AI companion is specifically built for the needs of students. Based on the millions of content pieces we have on the platform we can provide truly meaningful and relevant answers to students. But its not only about answers, the companion is even more about guiding students through their daily learning challenges, with personalised study plans, quizzes or content pieces in the chat and 100% personalisation based on the students skills and developments.
Where can I download the Knowunity app?
You can download the app in the Google Play Store and in the Apple App Store.
Is Knowunity really free of charge?
That's right! Enjoy free access to study content, connect with fellow students, and get instant help – all at your fingertips.
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