Maintain Homeostasis
When a living system is in homeostasis, it means that internal conditions are stable and relatively constant. For example, a human’s internal temperature is approximately 37 degrees Celsius (98.6 degrees Fahrenheit) unless there’s an illness. The human body maintains this temperature despite external ambient temperature. However, as with all physiological processes, maintaining homeostasis requires communication and coordination. So living systems have ways to detect changes from the norm, mechanisms to cause an adjustment, and negative feedback connections between the two. A desert lizard called the Gila monster offers a good example of maintaining homeostasis. The lizard goes from eating large meals to fasting for extended time periods. To maintain its blood sugar levels at a steady level, when food is scarce, its endocrine system releases a hormone that raises its blood sugar levels.
Protect From Loss of Gases
Gases are part of most living systems’ environment, especially those exposed to the earth’s atmosphere. Many gases are crucial to survival, with the two most important being oxygen and carbon dioxide. In some environments, oxygen or other essential gases may be in low supply, such as underwater where there’s been a decrease in the amount of dissolved gases. Living systems must have strategies to survive in that depleted environment. An example is a shark that reduces its respiration rate to survive when oxygen levels are low.
Prevent Fracture/Rupture
High force impact or stress can cause materials that comprise living systems to separate into two or more pieces (called fracturing) or to break or burst suddenly (called rupturing). For example, a scallop prevents structural failure from fracture because its shell is comprised of two materials of varying stiffness. When a crack moves from the scallop’s stiff material to the less stiff one, the latter reduces the force at the tip of the crack, thereby stopping it from spreading farther.