It is grass! Grass is a living organism (until it dies).
In the event a population grows above the carrying capacity for that population, the weakest links of begin to die out as the strongest live to compete for resources. The large population of one organism, assuming that organism is a consumer, can cause another population of organisms to become scarce due to the overfeeding on that organism.
Yes of course they are, at least until they die.
no, it is a living organism that learns as it grows. it breathes, uses energy, and produces things. it is alive. every time you put the headphones in your ears it sucks a peice of information from your brain until you have forgotten your childhood and eventually becme deaf.
Yes, yeast is alive it eats sugars, it grows, it reproduces.
Living organisms crawl into the cracks and as their family grows so does the crack until the rock splits
HIV is a virus, and since viruses require another organism to carry out the functions that would classify it as a living organism, it's considered "dead," that is until it finds a host.
Are eggs** and eggs are pretty much like a woman's womb, technically the organism is living, but they are not sentient until after they hatch
You will feel this rush of emotions that make your body tremble and the walls shake from your head to your toes and when it is over you will feel like a rubberband from head to toe. Your world will be perfect for as long as the endorphines take to wear off...until next time.
The largest living cell is the caulerpa. An egg is one cell, but it isn't an organism. It doesn't function as an "individual living system" until it is fertilized, at which point it is no longer one cell. by:Mari N. Jensen
Probably death. Because until then there is always some more living to be done.
when a living organism dies on the surface of the earth and sediment pile on it over time and it decays.