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Mushrooms are living.
water
When trying to come up with characteristics of nonliving things, it helps to think about what makes them different from living things. Unlike living organisms, nonliving things do not need water to survive, nor do they have reproductive or respiratory systems. In addition, nonliving things do not need nutrition in order to exist.
the living dead
Mushrooms, bacteria, fungi, and protists are example of living things that are neither plants nor animals.
Neither living stuff, nor water, nor atmosphere, is necessary in order to have volcanoes.
When living things can neither adapt nor relocate when a change occurs, it is likely that large numbers of the species or group will die.
No. Prions are neither prokaryotic nor eukaryotic. They are similar to viruses - nonliving. However, they are more "nonliving" than viruses in the respect that they are just protein sans nucleic acid or anything cell-like.
Yogurt is neither a vertebrate nor an invertebrate, as it is not a living organism.
Living things differ from non-living things because living things can function by themselves and don't need to be controlled by humans.
Technically, plasma membrane is neither living nor dead. It is simply a structure of the simplest living organism, the cell. It is given command by the cell and acts accordingly, but it is not living, nor was it ever living.
Technically, plasma membrane is neither living nor dead. It is simply a structure of the simplest living organism, the cell. It is given command by the cell and acts accordingly, but it is not living, nor was it ever living.