ANIMAL FORM & FUNCTION
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Transcript ANIMAL FORM & FUNCTION
CONTROLLING
THE
INTERNAL
ENVIRONMENT
Volunteer State Community College
Nancy G. Morris
Campbell: Chapter 44
Control the Internal Environment
Most animals can survive
environmental fluctuations more
extreme than any individual cell
could tolerate…
because mechanisms of homeostasis
maintain internal environments within
ranges tolerable to body cells.
Mechanisms of homeostasis:
Adaptation to the thermal environment:
thermoregulation
Adaptation to the osmotic environment:
osmoregulation
Strategies for the elimination of waste
products of protein catabolism:
excretion
Regulation of Body Temperature
Metabolism & membrane properties are
very sensitive to changes in an animal’s
internal temperature.
Each animal lives in, and is adapted to,
an optimal temperature range in which it
can maintain a constant internal
temperature when external temperatures
fluctuate.
Maintaining the body temperature within
a range that permits cells to function
efficiently is known as thermoregulation.
4 physical processes account for heat
gain or loss:
1) Conduction
2) Convection
3) Radiation
4) Evaporation
Evaporation & convection are the
most variable causes of heat
loss.
4 physical processes account for heat
gain or loss:
Conduction is the direct transfer of heat
(thermal motion) between molecules of
the environment & body surface.
– Heat is always conducted from a body of
higher temperature to one of lower
temperature.
– Water is 50 to 100 times more efficient
than air in conducting heat.
– On a hot day, an animal in cold water cools
more rapidly than one on land.
4 physical processes account for heat
gain or loss:
Convection is the transfer of heat
by movement of air or liquid past
a body surface.
– For example, breezes contribute to
heat loss from an animal with dry
skin.
4 physical processes account for heat
gain or loss:
Radiation is the emission of
electromagnetic waves
produced by all objects
warmer than absolute zero.
– It can transfer heat between
objects not in direct contact.
– For example, an animal can be
warmed by the heat radiating
from the sun.
4 physical processes account for heat
gain or loss:
Evaporation is the loss of heat from a
liquid’s surface that is losing some
molecules as gas.
- Production of sweat greatly increases
evaporative cooling
- Can only occur if surrounding air is not
saturated with water molecules.
Major source of heat?
Ectotherms derive body heat mainly
from their surroundings
– Invertebrates, fishes, reptiles, amphibians
Endotherms derive heat mainly from
metabolic activity
– Mammals, birds, some fishes, numerous
insects
Thermoregulation:
Involves physiological and behavioral
adjustments.
Heat loss is reduced by presence of hair,
feathers, and fat just below the skin.
The amount of blood flowing to the skin
can be changed to regulate heat
exchange: vasodilation and
vasoconstriction.
Evaporative heat loss: panting, sweating,
bathing increases evaporative cooling
across the skin.
Behavioral Responses
In winter, many animals bask in
the sun or on warm rocks.
In summer, many animals burrow
or move to damp areas.
Some animals migrate to more
suitable climates.
Metabolic heat production
Occurs only in birds and mammals
Increased muscle activity and
shivering can greatly increase
metabolic heat produced.
Water Balance & Waste Disposal
The majority of cell in most animals (all but
sponges and cnidarians) are not exposed to
the external environment, but are bathed by
an extracellular fluid.
Animals with an open circulatory system have
an extracellular compartment containing
hemolymph which bathes the cells.
Animals with a closed circulatory system have
two extracellular compartments – interstitial
fluid and blood plasma.
Nitrogenous Wastes
The metabolism of proteins and
nucleic acids produces ammonia, a
small & very toxic waste product.
Some animals excrete the
ammonia directly, while other
convert it to urea or uric acid,
which are less toxic, but require
ATP to produce.
Nitrogenous Wastes:
Ammonia:
water soluble and permeates
membranes easily.
produced by aquatic animals.
In soft-bodied invertebrates,
ammonia diffuses across the body
surface and into the surrounding
water.
In fishes, ammonia is excreted as
ammonium ions across gill
epithelium.
Nitrogenous Wastes:
Urea
Terrestrial animals can not excrete ammonia
because it requires large amounts of water and
is so toxic it must be eliminated quickly.
Mammals & adult amphibians
Can be concentrated because it is 100,000
times LESS toxic than ammonia.
Reduces water loss for terrestrial animals.
Liver combines CO2 with amine groups to
produce urea. Filtered out by kidneys.
Nitrogenous Wastes:
Uric Acid
Land snails, insects, birds, and many
reptiles.
Much less water soluble than urea or
ammonia; can be excreted as a precipitate
after reabsorption of water from urine.
Eliminated through cloaca in paste form
(mixed with feces) in birds & reptiles.
Because it precipitates out, it can be
stored as a solid in the egg without toxic
build up.
Nitrogenous
Wastes
Osmotic gain and water loss:
•Animal cells can not survive a net gain or
a loss of water.
•Osmosis – diffusion of water
•Occurs when two solutions separated by
a membrane differ in osmolarity (total
solute concentration)
•In other words, there is a concentration
difference.
Osmoregulators expend energy
Osmoregulators expend energy to control
their internal osmolarity.
Water may enter a terrestrial organism
through food, drinking, oxidative
phosphorylation; water may exit through
excretion and evaporation.
Aquatic organisms are not affected by
evaporation but face a major osmotic
problem: water may enter (in fresh
water) or leave (in marine water) the
body.
Excretion
process by which metabolic
wastes are eliminated
urine, sweat, CO2, nitrogen
are primary wastes
3 excretory functions:
– Nitrogen Excretion
– Osmotic Regulation
– Water Balance
Nitrogen Excretion
nitrogenous waste results from
deamination of amino acids during
protein catabolism
packaged as urea by liver
filtered out by kidneys
Excretion
OSMOTIC REGULATION
(regulation of salt, ions, solutes)
fluid and electrolyte
homeostasis
WATER BALANCE
(maintenance)
Major fluid compartments:
PLASMA COMPARTMENT
– Blood plasma
–
INTERSTITIAL COMPARTMENT
– Bathing tissues & returning to blood
INTRACELLULAR FLUID
– Inside cell
What goes where?
Approximately 2,300 mL H2O absorbed per
day by the small intestine
Approximately 300 mL per day lost from the
lungs
Approximately 1500 mL per day lost from the
kidneys
Approximately 500 mL per day lost from the skin
Water sources:
Principle source is diet.
Oxidation of nutrient molecules
during aerobic respiration. Why?
Form follows function (again):
Excretory structures vary based on the
type of osmotic environment in which the
animal lives.
TERRESTRIAL ANIMALS need to
conserve water so …
Reptiles & birds excrete nitrogenous
wastes as crystalline uric acid.
Mammals excrete urea that must be
dissolved in water (urine).
Osmoregulation in Fishes:
Survey of the phyla:
CONTRACTILE VACUOLES
sponges
PROTONEPHRIDIUM – (44.15)
platyhelminthes & nematodes
METANEPHRIDIUM – (44.16)
annelids
MALPHIGIAN TUBULES – (44.17)
arthropods
NEPHRIDIUM – (44.18)
mammals
Survey of the phyla:
PROTONEPHRIDIUM
platyhelminthes & nematodes
flame-bulb system
wastes either diffuse out of
body or are excreted into the
gastrovascular cavity
cilia keeps fluid moving though
the tubules
Survey of the phyla:
METANEPHRIDIUM annelids
coelom is fluid-filled
each tubule possesses a nephrostome,
collecting tubule, and a nephridiopore
nephrostome drains the metamere
just anterior to the one in which the
metanephridium is located
cilia keeps fluid moving though the
tubules
Metanephridium:
Survey of the phyla:
Malphigian tubules – arthropods
outfoldings of the digestive system.
tubules secrete nitrogenous wastes
and salts from the hemolymph; water
follows the solutes by osmosis.
most of the water and salts are
reabsorbed across the epithelium in
the rectum.
dry product called frass is eliminated.
Malpighian Tubules:
Major organs:
Kidneys
Ureters
Bladder
Urethra
Aorta & Posterior Vena Cava
Renal arteries & renal veins
Human Excretory System:
Anatomy:
The Kidney:
Ureter
Renal pelvis
– Collecting ducts
Renal medulla
– Loop of Henle
– Collecting Ducts
Renal cortex (bark)
– Bowman’s capsules
– Prominal & distal tubules
Human Excretory System:
Anatomy of a Nephron:
Glomerulus
Afferent & efferent arteriole
Peritubular capillaries
Proximal Tubuke
Loop of Henle – ascending & descending
Collecting Duct
Human Excretory System:
URINE FORMATION:
Basic unit of Mammalian Kidney:
– nephron
– 1 million per kidney
– total of 50 miles of tubules
Involves two sets of capillaries:
– 1) glomerulus
– 2) peritubular capillaries
Human Excretory System
URINE FORMATION:
Four components:
–
–
–
–
1)
2)
3)
4)
filtration
reabsorption
secretion
excretion
Urine Formation
URINE FORMATION:
1) Filtration:
Filtrate is forced out of glomerulus &
received by Bowman’s capsule.
Approximately 180 liters per day or
4.5 x the amount of fluid in the body
is forced out into glomerulus.
= filters 125 mL per minute
URINE FORMATION:
2) Reabsorption:
Occurs simultaneously with secretion.
Mostly salts, H2O, solutes, vitamins
are transported back to peritubular
capillaries via active transport.
124 mL of the 125 mL filtered out
during filtration will be reabsorbed
here.
URINE FORMATION:
3) Secretion:
Filtrate is passed through the renal
tubule.
Walls of the tubule are a single cellular
layer of cubodial epithelium specialized
for active transport.
Molecules remaining in the plasma are
selectively removed (penicillin) from the
peritubular capillaries & secreted into the
filtrate.
URINE FORMATION:
Na+ Pump – sodium ions are actively
pumped across the membrane and Clfollow passively by electrostatic
attraction.
Active transport is a “high energy”
requirement – higher on a gram for
gram basis than the heart beat.
URINE FORMATION:
4) Excretion:
Remaining fluids leave the nephron
and pass into the renal pelvis (funnel
of the ureter) and travel to bladder
until released through the urethra.
The Nephron:
URINE FORMATION:
Normal urine contains:
1) 95% water
2) urea
3) electrolytes – such as
– Na+, Cl-, PO4-, SO4 4) pigments
5) hormones
URINE FORMATION:
Abnormal Urine contains:
1) high glucose – diabetes mellitus
2) RBC’s
3) WBC’s
4) proteins
5) ketone bodies (catabolism of
fatty acids, ketogenesis)
Human kidney concentrates urine: