Biology, asked by jesus2003, 1 year ago

Explain how living things, such as people and trees, are different from nonliving things, such as rocks and the tent.

Answers

Answered by chakani1
22
Some of the daily live examples of living things around us are human beings, animals, plants and microorganisms. Non-living things do not exhibit any characteristics of life. They do not grow, respire, need energy, move reproduce, evolve,maintain homeostasis. These things are made of non living materials
Answered by bandameedipravalika0
0

Answer:

Explanation:

Living things:

Cells, which are tiny structures with a defined shape, are the building blocks of all living organisms. They develop and show signs of motility. They go through metabolism, which involves both catabolic and anabolic processes.

Through the act of reproduction, living beings are able to create a brand-new life that is of their own type. Everything that is alive has a finite lifespan and is not eternal.

Example: Humans, animals, plants, insects.

Non-living things:

Things that aren't alive aren't alive. They don't have life in them. They do not develop, have cells, or exhibit motility or movement. They don't go through anabolic and catabolic responses throughout metabolism. They don't procreate.

Things that are not living do not have a lifespan. Since they do not need food for energy, they do not breathe and do not expel. They are not subject to any cycle of birth, development, or demise. External influences both build and destroy them.

Objects like stones, pencils, books, bikes, bottles, rocks and the tent. etc. are examples of non-living objects.

The difference between living things and nonliving things is little things that we call is senses like sight, taste, touch, smell, and hearing. For example a human or animal can react to someone or something touching them. For a nonliving thing such as a rock can't react to someone touching them unless u force them to.

#SPJ2

Similar questions