The 7 Characteristics of Living Things
Understanding Life: From Cells to Organisms - Master the foundation of CSEC Biology!
What Makes Something "Living"?
Defining Life: Biology is the study of living things, but how do we distinguish living organisms from non-living objects? All living things share seven key characteristics that define what it means to be alive.
The MRS GREN Acronym: To remember these characteristics, biologists use the handy acronym MRS GREN (or sometimes MR GREN). This simple memory tool helps you recall all seven characteristics!
Quick Quiz: Which of these show ALL characteristics of living things?
Living Things
Non-Living Things
Movement
What is Movement in Living Things?
Definition: The ability of an organism to change position or place. Movement can be of the whole organism or parts of the organism.
- Animals: Most animals move their entire bodies from place to place (locomotion)
- Plants: Plants show movement too, but usually of their parts (leaves turning toward light, roots growing downward)
- Internal Movement: Movement inside organisms (blood circulation, food through digestive system)
Identify which types of movement are shown in these examples!
CSEC Exam Tip: Remember that plants DO show movement, just differently from animals. Exam questions often test this distinction!
Respiration
What is Respiration?
Definition: The chemical process that releases energy from food (usually glucose) in cells. This is NOT the same as breathing!
- Aerobic Respiration: Uses oxygen (most efficient) - Glucose + Oxygen → Carbon Dioxide + Water + Energy
- Anaerobic Respiration: Without oxygen (less efficient) - Glucose → Lactic Acid + Energy (in animals) or Alcohol + Carbon Dioxide + Energy (in yeast)
- Cellular Process: Occurs in mitochondria of cells
Drag each description to the correct category!
Respiration
Breathing
Did You Know? Plants respire too! They take in oxygen and release carbon dioxide at night when photosynthesis isn't occurring.
Sensitivity (Irritability)
Responding to the Environment
Definition: The ability to detect and respond to changes in the environment (stimuli).
- Animals: Have specialized sense organs (eyes, ears, skin receptors)
- Plants: Respond to light (phototropism), gravity (geotropism), water, and touch
- Simple Organisms: Bacteria move toward nutrients (chemotaxis)
Match each stimulus with the correct biological response!
CSEC Exam Tip: Be prepared to give specific examples of stimuli and responses for different organisms.
Growth
What is Biological Growth?
Definition: A permanent increase in size and dry mass (weight without water) by cell division and/or cell enlargement.
- Cell Division: Mitosis produces new cells
- Cell Enlargement: Cells increase in size (common in plants)
- Differentiation: Cells develop into specialized types
Adjust the slider to see different types of growth in living organisms!
Key Distinction: Living things grow from within (cell-based), while non-living things may increase in size by adding material to the outside (like crystals growing or dust accumulating).
Reproduction
Creating New Life
Definition: The production of offspring, either sexually or asexually, to continue the species.
Types of Reproduction
- Sexual Reproduction: Involves two parents, genetic variation, gametes (sex cells)
- Asexual Reproduction: One parent, genetically identical offspring, faster
Classify each example as sexual or asexual reproduction!
1. Humans having a baby
2. Bacteria dividing by binary fission
3. Potato growing from a tuber
4. Birds laying fertilized eggs
5. Yeast budding
Answers will appear here...
CSEC Exam Tip: Remember that reproduction is essential for species survival but NOT for individual survival. An individual can live without reproducing.
Excretion
Removing Waste Products
Definition: The removal of toxic waste products of metabolism (chemical reactions in cells).
Key Metabolic Wastes
- Carbon Dioxide: From respiration (removed by lungs in animals)
- Urea: From breakdown of excess proteins (removed by kidneys)
- Oxygen: Waste product of photosynthesis in plants (released through stomata)
This is a COMMON exam confusion - learn the difference!
Excretion
Removal of metabolic waste (made in cells)
Examples: CO₂, urea, sweat
Egestion
Removal of undigested food (not made in cells)
Examples: Feces (faeces)
Remember: Plants excrete too! They remove oxygen (photosynthesis waste) and other compounds through leaves, bark, or into soil.
Nutrition
Obtaining and Using Food
Definition: The taking in of nutrients (food) for energy, growth, and repair.
Types of Nutrition
- Autotrophic Nutrition: Organisms make their own food (photosynthesis in plants, chemosynthesis in some bacteria)
- Heterotrophic Nutrition: Organisms consume other organisms (animals, fungi, some bacteria)
Build your own food chain showing different nutritional relationships!
CSEC Exam Tip: Know the difference between photosynthesis (making food) and respiration (releasing energy from food).
Summary & CSEC Exam Preparation
MRS GREN Summary Table
| Characteristic | Definition | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Movement | Change of position or place | Cheetah running, plant roots growing downward |
| Respiration | Release of energy from food | Cells using glucose and oxygen to produce energy |
| Sensitivity | Response to stimuli | Plant bending toward light, human pulling hand from heat |
| Growth | Permanent increase in size and mass | Baby growing into adult, seedling becoming tree |
| Reproduction | Production of offspring | Human baby, seeds from flowers, bacteria dividing |
| Excretion | Removal of metabolic waste | CO₂ from lungs, urea in urine, oxygen from plants |
| Nutrition | Taking in and using food | Plant photosynthesis, animal eating food |
CSEC Exam Tips
- Common Mistake: Confusing excretion with egestion - remember EXCRETION = METABOLIC waste
- Question Style: "List FOUR characteristics of living things" - always give the full term AND an example
- Application: Be prepared to apply MRS GREN to specific organisms in exam questions
- Memory Aid: Create your own mnemonic or story using MRS GREN
Test your knowledge with CSEC-style questions!
Quiz Complete!
Conclusion: The Unity of Life
Why MRS GREN Matters
All living things - from the smallest bacterium to the largest whale, from moss to mahogany trees - share these seven characteristics. This unity demonstrates the interconnectedness of life on Earth. Remember the acronym MRS GREN as your key memory tool for this fundamental biological concept.
Real-World Application
Understanding these characteristics helps scientists:
- Identify new species discovered in remote locations
- Determine if something found on other planets might be alive
- Study how organisms adapt to changing environments
- Develop medicines that target specific life processes
Did You Know?
Viruses are a special case! They have genetic material and can reproduce, but ONLY inside host cells. They don't carry out other life processes independently.
Think About It
If you discovered something that showed 6 of the 7 characteristics, would you classify it as living? Why or why not?
Study Challenge
Choose an organism (like a mango tree or a chicken) and explain how it shows EACH of the 7 characteristics.
Next Steps in Your Biology Journey
Now that you've mastered the characteristics of living things, you're ready to explore:
- Cell Structure and Function - How these characteristics happen at cellular level
- Classification of Organisms - How we group living things based on similarities
- Ecosystems - How living things interact with each other and their environment
