TLDR;
This video by Sasra Murni explains the characteristics of living things. It covers respiration, nutrition, movement, sensitivity to stimuli, growth and development, reproduction, excretion, and adaptation. The video uses examples to illustrate each characteristic, making it easy to understand.
- Living things breathe, need food, move, and are sensitive to stimuli.
- Living things grow, develop, reproduce, excrete waste, and adapt to their environment.
- Examples are provided for each characteristic to aid understanding.
Introduction [0:00]
The video introduces the topic of identifying the characteristics of living things. The learning objective is for viewers to be able to identify these characteristics after watching the video.
Breathing [1:05]
Breathing, or respiration, is the first characteristic discussed. It involves inhaling oxygen and releasing carbon dioxide. Plants breathe through stomata, needing carbon dioxide and releasing oxygen.
Nutrition [1:36]
Living things need food for energy, cell generation, tissue maintenance, and defense against diseases. Healthy and nutritious foods containing carbohydrates, proteins, vitamins, fiber, minerals, fats, and water are essential. Animals are classified based on their food: herbivores (plant-eaters), carnivores (meat-eaters), and omnivores (plant and meat-eaters).
Movement [3:12]
All living things move, even if it's not always obvious. Examples include taxis and tropism in plants, where movement is influenced by stimuli like sunlight. Birds fly using wings, and fish move using fins.
Sensitivity to Stimuli [3:56]
Living things respond to external stimuli such as touch, light, smell, and taste. Examples include blinking when exposed to light, covering the nose in response to a pungent smell, and the tongue's sensitivity to sweet, bitter, and sour tastes. The skin is also sensitive to stimuli.
Growth and Development [4:51]
Growth is a change in size (length, mass, volume) and can be measured quantitatively. Development is a process towards maturity and can only be measured qualitatively. Human growth progresses from baby to toddler, child, teenager, and adult. Development in males includes voice changes and body hair, while in females, it involves changes in body shape and reproductive organ function. Plant growth involves increasing in size over time.
Reproduction [6:21]
Living things reproduce to maintain the sustainability of their species. Animals reproduce in several ways: oviparous (laying eggs), viviparous (giving birth), and ovoviviparous (laying eggs and giving birth).
Excretion [7:12]
Living things excrete waste substances produced during metabolic processes. In humans, excretion occurs through the kidneys (urine), lungs (carbon dioxide), and skin (sweat).
Adaptation [7:51]
Living things can adapt to their environment. This includes morphological adaptation (adjusting physical structures like beak shape), physiological adaptation (internal adjustments like camels forming a hump), and behavioral adaptation (actions like polar bears adapting to polar snow).