* Living things are made of cells. * Living things obtain and use energy. * Living things grow and develop and move. * Living things reproduce. * Living things respond and may adapt to their environment.
Just about ALL human (and living organism) characteristics are affected by genes.
Six characteristics of living thingsReproductionContain similair chemicalsResponds to surroundingsGrowth and DevelopmentCellular OrginizationEnergyFour things living organisms needWaterStable Internal ConditionsLiving SpaceEnergy
they are dead
Biologically things are considered living if they meet the following criteria: 1. made up of DNA-containing cells 2. reproduce 3. grow and change 4. respond to environment 5. consume energy While a robot meets some of these criteria it is not and probably never will be made up of DNA-containing cells and so is not biologically considered living.
Viruses in general are somewhere on the border of "living" and "non-living" - they have some characteristics of living beings (notably, they can reproduce), but they lack others (such as a metabolism).
No they can't kill a living creature.
To use your five senses to the max & be fined tuned into the 6th.
the first living creature in the dictionary is an aardvark
non living
The heaviest living creature is the blue whale, which can weigh up to 200 tons.
The largest and heaviest living creature on earth is the blue whale.
A creature known for living in a shell is a mollusk, such as a snail or a clam.
It's not a living creature, it's a calcium carbonate deposit. It is not a living creature in any way.
No. A living thing has to have exactly all of the following five characteristics of a living thing to be living:Responsive to the environmentBeing able to reproduceUsing energyGrowing and DevelopingBeing made of cells
I believe the biggest living creature that scientists know of right now is the Blue Whale.
Yes. EVery living creature has DNA, even germs.
Is it still on the bone?If yes, is the bone part of a fully formed skeleton?If yes, is the skeleton inside of a living animal?If yes, then yes, it is. Otherwise no.