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Download lecture notes ch40 Animal Structure and
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Review Sheet 40 Animal Structure and Function 1) Anatomy is the study of organism structure. Physiology is the study of organism function. Since structure and function are highly related, anatomy and physiology are often studied together. 2) Organisms are constrained by physical laws (e.g. properties of elements, geometrical properties, etc.). These physical constraints partly explain the occurrence of convergent evolution. 3) One major physical constraint is surface area to volume ratio. When a linear dimension (e.g. height, width, length) increases by x, surface area (e.g., total body surface area, cross-sectional surface area, etc.) increases by x2, and volume increases by x3. Another way of saying this is that whenever height doubles, surface area quadruples, and volume increases eight-fold. “Size” measured in three different ways One dimensional (size of a line) Scale (A = a linear measurement, e.g. height) A Two dimensional (size of a square) AxA Three dimensional (size of a cube) AxAxA Examples Height, length, width, length of limbs, length of a nerve axon Surface area of skin; thickness of muscles; inner surface area of intestine Volume; body weight 4) Body size is constrained by surface area to volume ratio in a number of ways. Cell size is limited because as cell mass and consequent nutrient and gas exchange requirements increase by a cube, its membrane exchange surface only increase by a square. Thus, a giant cell would not be able to support itself. 5) The strength of support structures and muscles depends on the thickness of those structures. The thickness of a structure is best measured by its cross-sectional surface area. If an increase in body size results in strength increasing by a factor of x, then body weight will increase by a factor of x2. This means that when body size increases, body weight increases more quickly than body strength. For this reason, larger animals must be built with heavier muscles and skeletons (e.g. compare an ant, a dog, and an elephant). An ant scaled up to cow size would be too weak or too heavy to stand up. 6) The surface area to volume ratio also affects climbing ability. Small animals like insects or squirrels can crawl on vertical surfaces in part because the surface area of their feet relative to their body weight is very high. It’s easier for a small animal to get a “grip” on a surface that is strong enough to support their weight. It also helps that falling is less risky for smaller animals! 7) Organisms cannot ignore physical constraints, but they can work around them. For example, body size can be increased without reducing the surface area to volume ratio if an organism by changing the organism’s shape (e.g. sac body plan of hydra). A flat or elongated body will have more surface area than a sphere, allowing more exchange of materials. Another way to increase the exchange surface area is elongated projections (e.g. villi in the small intestine, or root hairs of plant roots). An adaptation for increasing the rate of exchange found in virtually all organisms are branched networks of transport tubes (e.g. roots, blood vessels, alveolar passages in lungs, slime mold plasmodium, etc.). 8) Bioenergetics is the study of energy flow in living systems. Machines, by definition, use energy to do work. Organisms also use energy to do work. What make organisms very distinct from machines is that organisms use energy for self-organization and self-maintenance. Organisms starve if deprived of food because they need energy for self-maintenance. Machines without fuel do not suffer damage from starvation because they do not use energy for self-maintenance. Of course, organisms also use energy for purposes not directly related to self-maintenance, like movement, or synthesizing chemicals, processing information, etc. 9) Metabolism is the sum total of the chemical reactions that occur in a living organism’s body. Since all biological functions are fueled by chemical energy, metabolism also represents the sum total of an organism’s energy use. Metabolic rate (MR) is the rate of these reactions. A higher metabolic rate means that the organism’s need for food and oxygen will be higher. A high metabolic rate also allows for a more active life style. 10) Basal metabolic rate (BMR) is the MR of an endotherm that is not growing, at rest but not sleeping, has an empty digestive tract, and is not stressed. It is roughly the same as the minimum metabolic reactions necessary for self-maintenance and continued life. Standard metabolic rate (SMR) is like 11) 12) 13) 14) 15) 16) 17) basal metabolic rate, except it applies to ectotherms. Since ectotherm body temperatures vary, and chemical reaction rates depend on temperature, SMR must specify a temperature as well (e.g. SMR of an anole lizard at 25oC). Normally, animals adjust their metabolic rate, raising it to meet more energetically demanding activities. Maximal metabolic rate is the highest metabolic rate an organism can sustain using aerobic means. E.g. you would be at your maximal metabolic rate if you were to run a marathon at your fastest possible pace WITHOUT being overwhelmed by fatigue. Your metabolic rate during a sprint (running as fast as possible and quickly gaining fatigue) would no be maximal metabolic rate, since your metabolism would be mostly anaerobic. Anaerobic metabolism allows you to have a metabolic rate higher than maximal, but only for a short time before becoming fatigued. Maximal metabolic rate is usually proportional to basal or standard metabolic rate. Most animals can maintain a maximal metabolic rate about ten times their “baseline” metabolic rate. All organisms have energy budgets, with certain portions of their energy intake going towards circulation, breathing, neural functions, courting behavior, chasing food, etc. Two major bioenergetic strategies are endothermy and ectothermy. An ectotherm has a lower metabolic rate and is less active. It can survive on a much lower rate of food and oxygen intake than an endotherm. An endotherm has a metabolic rate about ten times greater than that of an ectotherm of similar size. Their body temperatures are elevated by internal heat production. Endothermy demands a high rate of food and oxygen intake, but also allows for a much higher maximal metabolic rate, making sustained physical exercise possible (such as would be necessary for an extended chase after prey, or away from a predator). Larger organisms have more tissue and, not surprisingly, more metabolic activity than smaller organism of similar type. However, metabolic rate is not directly proportional to body size (i.e. metabolic rate ~ body size is not true). The actual proportionality measured among related species of organisms is metabolic rate ~ body size0.7. To illustrate what this means, a mammals ten times larger than another mammal does not have an MR ten times higher, but instead an MR only about five times higher (100.7 = 5.0). This is called metabolic rate allometry. Allometry means that some characteristic varies disproportionately with body size. An example of allometry is that a human’s head does not grow as much as his body as he matures. This is why babies have large heads compared to their bodies. Metabolic rate allometry implies that larger animals have tissues that are less metabolically intense. This means that larger animal need less food per unit body mass than smaller animals. Larger animals also have slower heart rates since their tissues need less oxygen and nutrients per unit time. Larger animals also metabolize drugs more slowly. If a dose of anesthetic is scaled directly from humans to elephants and mice, it would kill the elephant and be insufficient to knock out a mouse. Smaller animals lose heat more quickly because of their higher surface area to volume ratio. Why is this not a sufficient explanation for metabolic rate allometry?