Page 1
Living Creatures: Exploring
their Characteristics
10 Chapter
Avadhi and Aayush go for a morning walk with their parents.
Avadhi notices some shells and tries to pick them up. Her
mother advises her not to do so and explains that the shell
could be home to a living snail and is actually a part of its
body. Avadhi and Aayush wonder how the shell that is not
even moving could have a living being inside! Later that
day in school, Avadhi and Aayush share this incident with
their friends. They approach the teacher to understand how
a shell which is not even moving could be a body part of a
living snail. The teacher initiates a discussion in the class on
living and non-living.
Chapter 10.indd 183 10-07-2024 18:21:03
Page 2
Living Creatures: Exploring
their Characteristics
10 Chapter
Avadhi and Aayush go for a morning walk with their parents.
Avadhi notices some shells and tries to pick them up. Her
mother advises her not to do so and explains that the shell
could be home to a living snail and is actually a part of its
body. Avadhi and Aayush wonder how the shell that is not
even moving could have a living being inside! Later that
day in school, Avadhi and Aayush share this incident with
their friends. They approach the teacher to understand how
a shell which is not even moving could be a body part of a
living snail. The teacher initiates a discussion in the class on
living and non-living.
Chapter 10.indd 183 10-07-2024 18:21:03
184
Activity 10.1: Let us record
We are surrounded by numerous things. Just look around
in your classroom and you may find many examples—the
pencil that you are holding, the book that you are reading or
the pigeon near the window.
? List them in Table 10.1 and identify each of them as
living or non-living on the basis of your understanding
in column II.
? Write a reason for grouping them as living or non living
in column III.
10.1 What Sets the Living Apart from the
Non-living?
Look at Table 10.1. Why do you think a pencil is non-living
but a pigeon is living? What do you think are the differences
between living beings and non-living things according to
you? What similarities do the identified living beings share
with each other?
You may have identified movement as one of the
similarities among living beings. You have also seen cars
moving on a road. Does it mean that a car is living? List the
(III) (V) (I) (II) (IV)
Name
My guess
(Living/
Non-
living)
Reason/
Remarks
Correct
answer
Reason/
Remarks for
the correct
answer
Pencil Non-living
Book
Pigeon Living
Car
Plant
Any other
Table 10.1: Living beings and non-living things in our
surroundings
184
Curiosity | Science Textbook | Grade 6
Chapter 10.indd 184 10-07-2024 18:21:03
Page 3
Living Creatures: Exploring
their Characteristics
10 Chapter
Avadhi and Aayush go for a morning walk with their parents.
Avadhi notices some shells and tries to pick them up. Her
mother advises her not to do so and explains that the shell
could be home to a living snail and is actually a part of its
body. Avadhi and Aayush wonder how the shell that is not
even moving could have a living being inside! Later that
day in school, Avadhi and Aayush share this incident with
their friends. They approach the teacher to understand how
a shell which is not even moving could be a body part of a
living snail. The teacher initiates a discussion in the class on
living and non-living.
Chapter 10.indd 183 10-07-2024 18:21:03
184
Activity 10.1: Let us record
We are surrounded by numerous things. Just look around
in your classroom and you may find many examples—the
pencil that you are holding, the book that you are reading or
the pigeon near the window.
? List them in Table 10.1 and identify each of them as
living or non-living on the basis of your understanding
in column II.
? Write a reason for grouping them as living or non living
in column III.
10.1 What Sets the Living Apart from the
Non-living?
Look at Table 10.1. Why do you think a pencil is non-living
but a pigeon is living? What do you think are the differences
between living beings and non-living things according to
you? What similarities do the identified living beings share
with each other?
You may have identified movement as one of the
similarities among living beings. You have also seen cars
moving on a road. Does it mean that a car is living? List the
(III) (V) (I) (II) (IV)
Name
My guess
(Living/
Non-
living)
Reason/
Remarks
Correct
answer
Reason/
Remarks for
the correct
answer
Pencil Non-living
Book
Pigeon Living
Car
Plant
Any other
Table 10.1: Living beings and non-living things in our
surroundings
184
Curiosity | Science Textbook | Grade 6
Chapter 10.indd 184 10-07-2024 18:21:03
Living Creatures: Exploring their
Characteristics
185
tasks that you can do but a car cannot. You are a wonderful
example of a living being. Whenever you attempt to group
things around you as living or non-living, you can compare
them with yourself. Which characteristics help you in
differentiating yourself from a car? For instance, a car
does not grow. Does it mean it is non-living? Now, which
characteristics have you used to classify a car as non-living?
Continue your discussion in a similar way to identify the
essential characteristics of living beings.
What are some common characteristics that make living
beings very different from the non-living things? Let us
learn about them.
Can we consider movement as one of the characteristics to
differentiate between the living and the non-living? List five
things around you that can move on their own. Do you think
that all five things that you have listed can be considered as
living just because they can move on their
own? However, unlike animals, plants do
not move from one place to another. Do
you consider them as living?
Even though plants do not move from
one place to another , they do show certain
types of movements. Opening of flowers is
one of the examples of movement in plants.
Another example of movement in plants is
seen in insectivorous plants. Insectivorous
plants are dependent on insects for their nutrition. Drosera
is one of the examples of an insectivore. Drosera is
featured with saucer-shaped leaves having many hair-like
projections of unequal length with sticky ends. Whenever
an insect enters the saucer, hairs move inward and
trap the insect with their sticky ends. Try to observe
the mechanism of movement in other insectivorous
plants. Climbers also wind themselves around
any object placed close to them. That means,
even though plants do not move from
one place to another, they do show
some movements.
Compare yourself with the
picture of your childhood. Can you
Activity 10.1: Let us record
We are surrounded by numerous things. Just look around
in your classroom and you may find many examples—the
pencil that you are holding, the book that you are reading or
the pigeon near the window.
? List them in Table 10.1 and identify each of them as
living or non-living on the basis of your understanding
in column II.
? Write a reason for grouping them as living or non living
in column III.
Growth of a child
Drosera
Chapter 10.indd 185 10-07-2024 18:21:08
Page 4
Living Creatures: Exploring
their Characteristics
10 Chapter
Avadhi and Aayush go for a morning walk with their parents.
Avadhi notices some shells and tries to pick them up. Her
mother advises her not to do so and explains that the shell
could be home to a living snail and is actually a part of its
body. Avadhi and Aayush wonder how the shell that is not
even moving could have a living being inside! Later that
day in school, Avadhi and Aayush share this incident with
their friends. They approach the teacher to understand how
a shell which is not even moving could be a body part of a
living snail. The teacher initiates a discussion in the class on
living and non-living.
Chapter 10.indd 183 10-07-2024 18:21:03
184
Activity 10.1: Let us record
We are surrounded by numerous things. Just look around
in your classroom and you may find many examples—the
pencil that you are holding, the book that you are reading or
the pigeon near the window.
? List them in Table 10.1 and identify each of them as
living or non-living on the basis of your understanding
in column II.
? Write a reason for grouping them as living or non living
in column III.
10.1 What Sets the Living Apart from the
Non-living?
Look at Table 10.1. Why do you think a pencil is non-living
but a pigeon is living? What do you think are the differences
between living beings and non-living things according to
you? What similarities do the identified living beings share
with each other?
You may have identified movement as one of the
similarities among living beings. You have also seen cars
moving on a road. Does it mean that a car is living? List the
(III) (V) (I) (II) (IV)
Name
My guess
(Living/
Non-
living)
Reason/
Remarks
Correct
answer
Reason/
Remarks for
the correct
answer
Pencil Non-living
Book
Pigeon Living
Car
Plant
Any other
Table 10.1: Living beings and non-living things in our
surroundings
184
Curiosity | Science Textbook | Grade 6
Chapter 10.indd 184 10-07-2024 18:21:03
Living Creatures: Exploring their
Characteristics
185
tasks that you can do but a car cannot. You are a wonderful
example of a living being. Whenever you attempt to group
things around you as living or non-living, you can compare
them with yourself. Which characteristics help you in
differentiating yourself from a car? For instance, a car
does not grow. Does it mean it is non-living? Now, which
characteristics have you used to classify a car as non-living?
Continue your discussion in a similar way to identify the
essential characteristics of living beings.
What are some common characteristics that make living
beings very different from the non-living things? Let us
learn about them.
Can we consider movement as one of the characteristics to
differentiate between the living and the non-living? List five
things around you that can move on their own. Do you think
that all five things that you have listed can be considered as
living just because they can move on their
own? However, unlike animals, plants do
not move from one place to another. Do
you consider them as living?
Even though plants do not move from
one place to another , they do show certain
types of movements. Opening of flowers is
one of the examples of movement in plants.
Another example of movement in plants is
seen in insectivorous plants. Insectivorous
plants are dependent on insects for their nutrition. Drosera
is one of the examples of an insectivore. Drosera is
featured with saucer-shaped leaves having many hair-like
projections of unequal length with sticky ends. Whenever
an insect enters the saucer, hairs move inward and
trap the insect with their sticky ends. Try to observe
the mechanism of movement in other insectivorous
plants. Climbers also wind themselves around
any object placed close to them. That means,
even though plants do not move from
one place to another, they do show
some movements.
Compare yourself with the
picture of your childhood. Can you
Activity 10.1: Let us record
We are surrounded by numerous things. Just look around
in your classroom and you may find many examples—the
pencil that you are holding, the book that you are reading or
the pigeon near the window.
? List them in Table 10.1 and identify each of them as
living or non-living on the basis of your understanding
in column II.
? Write a reason for grouping them as living or non living
in column III.
Growth of a child
Drosera
Chapter 10.indd 185 10-07-2024 18:21:08
Curiosity | Textbook of Science | Grade 6
186
wear the dress that you used to wear four years ago? No,
because you have become larger in size. This is due to growth
in your body. Plants and other living beings also grow. Can
we consider growth as a characteristic of living beings?
Living beings need food (nutrition) for their growth
and development. List five living beings that require food
to grow.
Now, think of a process without which we cannot live.
Count the number of breaths you take per minute after
a normal walk, after a run, and after a few dance steps.
Record the data and observe. Do you notice any difference
in the number of breaths after each situation? Do you notice
the process of breathing in other animals like dogs, cats,
cows and buffaloes? Notice the movement of their abdomen
while they are taking rest.
In the process of breathing, when we inhale, the air
moves from outside to inside our body. When we breathe
out, the air moves from inside our body to outside.
Breathing is part of a process called respiration. Do
plants also respire? There are tiny pores called stomata
on the surface of leaves. These pores help plants in taking
air in and out. Interact with senior class students in your
school and request if they can demonstrate stomata using
a microscope in your class. All living beings respire.
Have you noticed white patches forming on shirts around
the armpits during summers? These
patches are formed due to sweat. The
sweat consists of water and salts removed
by the body as waste products. Removal
of waste products from the body is called
excretion. Urine is also formed as a
product of excretion in animals. Do you
know that plants also excrete? You may
notice plants excrete excess water and
minerals in the form of small droplets on
leaves. For example, grasses and roses. All
living beings excrete.
Let us look at another characteristic.
What is your reaction if you unexpectedly
step on a sharp object, such as a thorn,
Water droplets on grass
Chapter 10.indd 186 10-07-2024 18:21:08
Page 5
Living Creatures: Exploring
their Characteristics
10 Chapter
Avadhi and Aayush go for a morning walk with their parents.
Avadhi notices some shells and tries to pick them up. Her
mother advises her not to do so and explains that the shell
could be home to a living snail and is actually a part of its
body. Avadhi and Aayush wonder how the shell that is not
even moving could have a living being inside! Later that
day in school, Avadhi and Aayush share this incident with
their friends. They approach the teacher to understand how
a shell which is not even moving could be a body part of a
living snail. The teacher initiates a discussion in the class on
living and non-living.
Chapter 10.indd 183 10-07-2024 18:21:03
184
Activity 10.1: Let us record
We are surrounded by numerous things. Just look around
in your classroom and you may find many examples—the
pencil that you are holding, the book that you are reading or
the pigeon near the window.
? List them in Table 10.1 and identify each of them as
living or non-living on the basis of your understanding
in column II.
? Write a reason for grouping them as living or non living
in column III.
10.1 What Sets the Living Apart from the
Non-living?
Look at Table 10.1. Why do you think a pencil is non-living
but a pigeon is living? What do you think are the differences
between living beings and non-living things according to
you? What similarities do the identified living beings share
with each other?
You may have identified movement as one of the
similarities among living beings. You have also seen cars
moving on a road. Does it mean that a car is living? List the
(III) (V) (I) (II) (IV)
Name
My guess
(Living/
Non-
living)
Reason/
Remarks
Correct
answer
Reason/
Remarks for
the correct
answer
Pencil Non-living
Book
Pigeon Living
Car
Plant
Any other
Table 10.1: Living beings and non-living things in our
surroundings
184
Curiosity | Science Textbook | Grade 6
Chapter 10.indd 184 10-07-2024 18:21:03
Living Creatures: Exploring their
Characteristics
185
tasks that you can do but a car cannot. You are a wonderful
example of a living being. Whenever you attempt to group
things around you as living or non-living, you can compare
them with yourself. Which characteristics help you in
differentiating yourself from a car? For instance, a car
does not grow. Does it mean it is non-living? Now, which
characteristics have you used to classify a car as non-living?
Continue your discussion in a similar way to identify the
essential characteristics of living beings.
What are some common characteristics that make living
beings very different from the non-living things? Let us
learn about them.
Can we consider movement as one of the characteristics to
differentiate between the living and the non-living? List five
things around you that can move on their own. Do you think
that all five things that you have listed can be considered as
living just because they can move on their
own? However, unlike animals, plants do
not move from one place to another. Do
you consider them as living?
Even though plants do not move from
one place to another , they do show certain
types of movements. Opening of flowers is
one of the examples of movement in plants.
Another example of movement in plants is
seen in insectivorous plants. Insectivorous
plants are dependent on insects for their nutrition. Drosera
is one of the examples of an insectivore. Drosera is
featured with saucer-shaped leaves having many hair-like
projections of unequal length with sticky ends. Whenever
an insect enters the saucer, hairs move inward and
trap the insect with their sticky ends. Try to observe
the mechanism of movement in other insectivorous
plants. Climbers also wind themselves around
any object placed close to them. That means,
even though plants do not move from
one place to another, they do show
some movements.
Compare yourself with the
picture of your childhood. Can you
Activity 10.1: Let us record
We are surrounded by numerous things. Just look around
in your classroom and you may find many examples—the
pencil that you are holding, the book that you are reading or
the pigeon near the window.
? List them in Table 10.1 and identify each of them as
living or non-living on the basis of your understanding
in column II.
? Write a reason for grouping them as living or non living
in column III.
Growth of a child
Drosera
Chapter 10.indd 185 10-07-2024 18:21:08
Curiosity | Textbook of Science | Grade 6
186
wear the dress that you used to wear four years ago? No,
because you have become larger in size. This is due to growth
in your body. Plants and other living beings also grow. Can
we consider growth as a characteristic of living beings?
Living beings need food (nutrition) for their growth
and development. List five living beings that require food
to grow.
Now, think of a process without which we cannot live.
Count the number of breaths you take per minute after
a normal walk, after a run, and after a few dance steps.
Record the data and observe. Do you notice any difference
in the number of breaths after each situation? Do you notice
the process of breathing in other animals like dogs, cats,
cows and buffaloes? Notice the movement of their abdomen
while they are taking rest.
In the process of breathing, when we inhale, the air
moves from outside to inside our body. When we breathe
out, the air moves from inside our body to outside.
Breathing is part of a process called respiration. Do
plants also respire? There are tiny pores called stomata
on the surface of leaves. These pores help plants in taking
air in and out. Interact with senior class students in your
school and request if they can demonstrate stomata using
a microscope in your class. All living beings respire.
Have you noticed white patches forming on shirts around
the armpits during summers? These
patches are formed due to sweat. The
sweat consists of water and salts removed
by the body as waste products. Removal
of waste products from the body is called
excretion. Urine is also formed as a
product of excretion in animals. Do you
know that plants also excrete? You may
notice plants excrete excess water and
minerals in the form of small droplets on
leaves. For example, grasses and roses. All
living beings excrete.
Let us look at another characteristic.
What is your reaction if you unexpectedly
step on a sharp object, such as a thorn,
Water droplets on grass
Chapter 10.indd 186 10-07-2024 18:21:08
Living Creatures: Exploring their
Characteristics
187
while walking without shoes, or you accidentally touch a hot
cup of tea? Stepping on a thorn and touching a hot object are
stimuli. Any thing or any event that prompts living beings
to respond is called a stimulus. List three stimuli (plural
of stimulus) and your body’s
instant response to them.
Do plants also respond to
stimuli? Yes, plants also respond
to stimuli. For example, touch-
me-not (mimosa, chhui-mui,
lajjalu) plants fold their leaves
when we touch them. Have you
also observed that certain plants
fold their leaves after sunset?
Specifically, the leaves of certain
plants facing each other tend
to come together. This can be
observed in the sleeping leaves
of amla (Indian gooseberry)
tree. All living beings respond to stimuli. Find a few more
plants in your neighbourhood which fold their leaves after
sunset.
Why do the leaves of chhui-mui and amla plants respond
in this way? Which stimulus could be responsible for their
behaviour?
Have you seen young ones of cats, dogs or other animals?
List young ones of five different animals. Have you seen
young ones of any non-living things such as a pencil, a chair
or an electric bulb?
All living beings reproduce. Reproduction is the
process of producing new ones of one’s own kind. Why is
reproduction necessary? It is necessary for the continuity
of life.
When a living being is not able to exhibit all of the above
mentioned characteristics, despite the availability of all
resources (like food, air and water) needed for being alive,
it is said to be dead.
From the above discussion, we can understand that
all living beings share some common characteristics. For
example, all living beings show movement, they need
Touch-me-not (chhui-mui) plant
Chapter 10.indd 187 10-07-2024 18:21:11
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