* '''carbon dioxide''' * '''oxygen''' '''this are your two types of gases that help living things'''
* '''carbon dioxide''' * '''oxygen''' '''this are your two types of gases that help living things'''
No, the four elements commonly found in living things (carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen) are not unique to living things. These elements are abundant in the universe and can also be found in non-living matter like rocks and gases.
Yes, all ladybugs expel gases. All living things expel gases.
oxygen and carbon dioxide are the 2 most important gases for living things
yes they do so they can breath
Earth, even though there are life forms on Earth which can use any of the gasses found on other planets.
Both oxygen and nitrogen are equally important to living things. Oxygen is necessary for metabolism to continue. But too much oxygen is poisonous. So the presence of nitrogen keeps the oxygen levels low enough to avoid poisoning.
That chemical molecules and gases could have combined on the early Earth to form the more complex compounds found in living things.
Non-living things do not have the ability to breathe, as they lack the necessary biological processes and components, such as respiratory systems, to do so. Breathing is a function typically associated with living organisms in order to exchange gases and obtain oxygen for survival.
-living things need food for energy -living things need water in order to survive -living things need a suitable habitat to survive -living things exchange gases, when animals breathe in and out,its body is getting rid of carbon dioxide and is breathing in oxygen
by looking the shape, state, elements & compounds, liquid and gases
every living thing uses gasses, one of the signs of life is respiration (ie gaseous exchange)