bones are important to living things because it protects plants
All living things do not have bones. All vertebrates (including mammals) do. Substitutes for bones include exoskeletons (arthropods and insects) or cartilage (sharks and some other fish).
Oxygen is the most important factor for living things.
Bones are living things. A group of cells referred to as osteoblasts, which are always churning out new bone, while a second set know as osteoclasts, destroys bone by gobbling it up.
The ozone in stratosphere is important for living things. The living things cannot expose themselves to UV which ozone protects.
Almost all - are you looking for things with bones?
Ozone gas is important for living things. It maintains our biosphere.
Water because most living things depend on it.
The correct spelling of the plural noun is skeletons (the bones of living things).
One important difference between living things and non-living things is that only living things have the ability to grow, reproduce, and respond to stimuli from their environment. Living organisms maintain homeostasis, utilize energy, and undergo metabolic processes to sustain life. In contrast, non-living things do not exhibit these biological functions or processes.
Yes. All living things are important.
All around us, living things or inorganic things are chemical compounds.
No. Living things such as insects have exoskeletons and no bones.