Biology, asked by sitampaswan7043, 1 year ago

Complete the following flow chart Cell-?-?-?organism

Answers

Answered by kusumnegi85
0

Cells--------> Tissue-------->organ-------->Organ System-------->Organisms.

Hope it helps if you don't understand follow the attachment.

Attachments:
Answered by apeksha160
1

Answer:

Cell--> tissue--> organ--> organ system--> organism

Explanation:

Whether of animal or plant origin, multicellular living things are all composed of several layers of structure, whose hierarchization can be broken down as follows, going from the macroscopic scale to the microscopic scale:

  • Organism level: The various organisational layers that are capable of autonomous living are all included in the organismal level. A living being has the capacity to eat, reproduce, and interact with its surroundings. An organism is made up of a variety of complementary and coordinated organ systems, as well as other bodily parts.
  • System level: a system is made up of an arrangement of various organs that, by their coordinated operation, help to realise an important biological activity (breathing, digestion, reproduction, protection.
  • Organ level: An organ is made up of a specific combination of tissues. An organ is an observable anatomical structure that carries out one or more distinct biological activities. A leaf is an organ of the plant comprised of many tissues, including epidermal tissue, chlorophyllous tissue, and sap-conducting tissue. In humans, the gut is an organ made up of dermal connective tissue and epithelium tissue.
  • Tissue is a multicellular structure made up of an assembly of cells that are roughly juxtaposed to one another. The science that examines tissues is called histology. Utilizing an optical microscope, the tissues are often viewed (O. M.).
  • At the cellular level, each living organism's cells serve as both its structural and functional units. There is a huge variety of cells, some of which are specialised for carrying out a particular biological purpose.
Similar questions