polivirus-causes polio and adenovirus-affextss the adenoids
viruses are not living things because they only carry out reproduction which is only one of the characteristics of a living thing. a thing to be called living it should have all the seven characteristics listed below: Respiration - viruses don't respire(breathe) Nutrition - viruses do not feed Excretion - since they don't eat and breathe they don't give out anything Sensitivity - they are not aware of the surrounding expect for their survival Growth - viruses don't grow no increase or decreaase in size Movement - they move Reproduction- they reproduce since only two characteristics are present viruses are declared non living .
No, meteorologists typically study the atmosphere and weather patterns, while virologists specialize in studying viruses and their impact on living organisms. These two fields are distinct and focus on different aspects of science.
Two characteristics of living things are the ability to grow and develop, and the ability to reproduce.
No, viruses are not bacteria. Bacteria are single-celled microorganisms that can reproduce on their own, while viruses are much smaller infectious particles that require a host cell to replicate. Bacteria are considered living organisms, while viruses are often debated as to whether they are living or not.
The two kingdoms of microscopic living things are Bacteria and Archaea. These organisms are single-celled and lack a distinct nucleus.
1. they don't have cells, virus is a chunk of nucleic acid with a protein coat. 2. most viruses are destructive and they reproduce inside living things.
The two things are: 1. Viruses behave as living beings only inside another living cell and act as a non living thing when isolated or outside the living cell. 2. The genetic material of a virus is RNA not DNA which is gives complexity in its study.
viruses are not living things because they only carry out reproduction which is only one of the characteristics of a living thing. a thing to be called living it should have all the seven characteristics listed below: Respiration - viruses don't respire(breathe) Nutrition - viruses do not feed Excretion - since they don't eat and breathe they don't give out anything Sensitivity - they are not aware of the surrounding expect for their survival Growth - viruses don't grow no increase or decreaase in size Movement - they move Reproduction- they reproduce since only two characteristics are present viruses are declared non living .
1) Viruses do not grow, they are a certain size from the moment they are made. Just a protein coat and a set of genetic instructions. 2) Viruses do not respire they don't turn over energy at all, they hijack living cells which can turn over energy and use them to do their reproduction. 3) Viruses do not excreat waste products- they don't make any so they don't need to. Most living things make some toxic substances which must be got rid off eg carbon dioxide and urea. 4) Viruses cannot reproduce, make more of their own kind without hijacking the apparatus of a living cell.
They don't have their own metabolism and they can't reproduce on their own, two reasons for which they are obligatory parasites. They have to infect other cells with metabolisms to reproduce.
No, meteorologists typically study the atmosphere and weather patterns, while virologists specialize in studying viruses and their impact on living organisms. These two fields are distinct and focus on different aspects of science.
Two characteristics of living things are the ability to grow and develop, and the ability to reproduce.
Viruses are composed of two main parts: an outer protein covering called a capsid and an inside core of either DNA or RNA. Not both DNA and RNA. Living cells also contain DNA and RNA. These are the only thing shared by living cells and viruses.
The two qualities living things of the troposphere is the birds and humans so that living need to survive.
The only characteristic of a living thing that is shared by viruses is genetic material, either DNA or RNA. They do not reproduce, their genetic information hijacks a living cell's machinery, and turns the cell into a virus factory, this is called replication. They do not require food. Some viruses have moving parts that allow them to inject their genetic material into the host cell.
No, viruses are not bacteria. Bacteria are single-celled microorganisms that can reproduce on their own, while viruses are much smaller infectious particles that require a host cell to replicate. Bacteria are considered living organisms, while viruses are often debated as to whether they are living or not.
The two basic needs of all living things are food and water.