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Document
Document

...  pseudocoelom = simple body cavity  digestive system  tube running through length of body (mouth to anus) ...
The Cardiorespiratory System
The Cardiorespiratory System

... • Alterations in breathing patterns are a prime example of this relationship. – During shallow breathing patterns, the secondary respiratory muscles are used more predominantly. – If this shallow, upper-chest breathing pattern becomes habitual, it can cause overuse of muscles including the scalenes, ...
The Characteristics of Living Things: Biology Scientists are
The Characteristics of Living Things: Biology Scientists are

... discovered and in Singapore a nematode (small flatworm) that lives only inside the lungs of the changeable lizard was found! By those who find a new species get to name it! So far scientists have named and recorded 1.3 million species that have lived or are living on earth. A Canadian scientist, Bor ...
Thirteenth Lecture 13. Musculoskeletal system
Thirteenth Lecture 13. Musculoskeletal system

... related to the surgical, diagnostic, pathological, grammatical and plural suffixes are also provided. Detailed information about prefixes is also mentioned. Prefix linking and prefix types are explained in detail and many examples related to different types of prefixes are provided. The basic struct ...


... 1. They are invertebrates with an exoskeleton, segmented body, and jointed appendages. They have an open circulatory system and reproduce sexually. Their name comes from the Greek for "joint-leg." What are they? ...
Fluid and Electrolytes All Slides
Fluid and Electrolytes All Slides

... (Remember blood tests measure extracellular fluid only – that’s why sodium is high and potassium is low!) Interstitial (between the cells) Intravascular (plasma)  arteries, veins, capillaries Transcellular  misc: urine, digestive secretions, perspiration etc. ...
Human Body study guide
Human Body study guide

... These questions/concepts serve as a guide to summarize all of the concepts we learned in Unit 3. Some of the concepts will be more prevalent (seen more) throughout the test compared to others. 1. The human body systems all focus on the concept of maintaining homeostasis. Explain, in your own words, ...
The Respiratory System
The Respiratory System

... •Approximately, 1,500 miles of airways are present in human lungs. •In human beings, the right lung is larger than left lung for accommodating the heart. •Yawning happens when the brain detects low oxygen levels in lungs and it triggers back the response to the body, so that it can intake large amou ...
Document
Document

... surface. • This is then passed along ciliated grooves along the edge of the gill to the mouth, where the labial palps push the food into the mouth. • Food then moves down the esophagus to the stomach, where the food is digested. ...
Animal Structure and Function
Animal Structure and Function

... delivered food for cellular respiration in order to produce ATP for cellular energy. Aerobic organisms must get oxygen from the environment and release carbon dioxide back to the environment due to cellular respiration. 1. Annelids obtain oxygen from their environment by diffusion through their mois ...
File - GertrudeKatzChronicles
File - GertrudeKatzChronicles

... administered through a vaccination (often through needle injections). It is usually made of a killed or weakened disease causing micro-organism. A vaccination stimulates the body's immune system to recognize the microorganism as a threat, destroy it, and keep a record of it, so that the immune syste ...
A niche describes the role or part an organism plays within its
A niche describes the role or part an organism plays within its

... A plant's or animal's niche, or more correctly, ecological niche, is a way of life that is unique to that species. Niche and habitat are not the same. While many species may share a habitat, this is not true of a niche. Each plant and animal species is a member of a community. The niche describes th ...
Population Biology
Population Biology

... population density, it is higher where conditions are better. This is, especially when viewed from a larger perspective, the most common pattern. ...
B1 Revision Cards - All Saints Academy Dunstable
B1 Revision Cards - All Saints Academy Dunstable

... Some vertebrates are difficult to classify as they don’t fit perfectly into any class. Even within a class, some species have different characteristics to the rest: e.g. axolotls have gills even as an adult but are still classed as amphibians (even though they respire more like fish) e.g. sharks use ...
classification - All Saints Academy Dunstable
classification - All Saints Academy Dunstable

... Some vertebrates are difficult to classify as they don’t fit perfectly into any class. Even within a class, some species have different characteristics to the rest: e.g. axolotls have gills even as an adult but are still classed as amphibians (even though they respire more like fish) e.g. sharks use ...
Let us now take a look at how life began and evolved into the
Let us now take a look at how life began and evolved into the

... the perfect example of an intermediate species that bridged the gap between two major classes of vertebrate groups. It still retained many reptilian features such as claws on the front of the wings, sharp teeth, and a long bony tail. Archaeopteryx might have been identified as a theropod dinosaur bu ...
Energy Flow Through an Ecosystem - kromko
Energy Flow Through an Ecosystem - kromko

... Habitat vs. Niche • Habitat: an area that provides an organism with its basic needs for survival. (Like food, shelter, temperature, moisture, etc...) • Niche: the role an organism plays in its ecosystem (aka - an organisms job) • An organisms location in a food chain helps to determine its niche. • ...
Life Science – Grade 7 Review Book
Life Science – Grade 7 Review Book

... The catalytic converter of an automobile decreases the amount of pollutants released by the exhaust system, but it also decreases the fuel efficiency of the engine. Which statement is best supported by this example? a. Fuel conservation is more important than decreasing pollution. b. Every technolog ...
Ecosystem
Ecosystem

... live in an area and the nonliving features of their environment ...
Bio 520
Bio 520

... Warning: The Rat’s body has TWO cavities (the Thoracic and Gastrovascular), separated by the diaphragm muscle. Be careful not to damage the diaphragm or the organs of each cavity. You may have to flush out your rat’s abdomen under flowing water in the sink to remove the fluid in the gastrovascular c ...
Ecology (NEW 2008)
Ecology (NEW 2008)

... Fundamental vs. Realized Niche A. Fundamental: An organism’s full potential range of physical, chemical, biological conditions and resources it could theoretically use if there was no competition from other species. B. Realized: Range of resources it actually uses. ...
What is an animal? Part 1
What is an animal? Part 1

... Animals show a correlation between body form (structure) and function. Form fits function at all the levels of life, from molecules to organisms. Knowledge of a structure provides insight into what it does and how its works. Conversely, knowing the function of a structure provides insight about its ...
Mass-Scaled Rates of Respiration and Intrinsic
Mass-Scaled Rates of Respiration and Intrinsic

... Abstract: This review compares rates of oxygen uptake and intrinsic growth of very small invertebrate species near 20 "C with those of larger invertebrate and unicellular animals by means of the allometric relation (rate a Mb where M = mass). Respiration rates of small species of major invertebrate ...
The Cardiorespiratory System
The Cardiorespiratory System

... • Alterations in breathing patterns are a prime example of this relationship. – During shallow breathing patterns, the secondary respiratory muscles are used more predominantly. – If this shallow, upper-chest breathing pattern becomes habitual, it can cause overuse of muscles including the scalenes, ...
27-2 Phylum Annelida - Ms. Sidhu's Biology Website
27-2 Phylum Annelida - Ms. Sidhu's Biology Website

... In Earthworms there are longitudinal vessels running the entire length of the worm, one dorsal and several ventral. Connecting the dorsal and ventral vessels, and so completing the circuit are five pairs of hearts, ...
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