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Excretory System Topic 13 I. Excretion A. excretion – removal of metabolic wastes produced in the body B. carbon dioxide – aerobic respiration C. water – aerobic respiration, dehydration synthesis D. nitrogenous wastes – (urea, ammonia, uric acid) – deamination of amino acids E. mineral salts – all metabolic processes II. Excretion in organisms A. protozoa and cnidarians – simple diffusion through the cell membrane – water – contractile vacuole – ameba, paramecium, and hydra Ameba Paramecium Hydra B. annelida – earthworm – two pairs of nephridia tubules – excrete water, mineral salts and nitrogenous wastes in the form of urea Earthworm’s Nephridia C. arthropods – grasshopper – nitrogenous wastes in the form of solid uric acid crystals – use Malphigian tubules – crystals are transported to the intestine and are expelled along with solid wastes of digestion Grasshopper – Malpighian tubules D. fish – osmoregulation – regulate the volume and salt content of their internal fluids Osmoregulation in fish III. Human Excretory System parts A. kidneys – form urine to remove nitrogenous wastes in the form of urea (urea is formed in the liver) as well as regulating the volume and salt content of the extracellular fluids B. ureter – tube that leads from the kidneys to the urinary bladder C. urinary bladder – urine is stored here until urination occurs D. urethra – urine leaves body through this tube Human Urinary System IV. Human excretory system – functional unit A. urea – amino acids get broken down from proteins and are used for energy in the Krebs cycle – the nitrogen is removed and released as ammonia which is toxic – the liver converts the ammonia to urea which is less toxic – the kidneys remove the urea from the blood stream Nephron B. nephron – functional unit of the kidney – first filters blood to form a filtrate fluid and then selectively modifies the filtrate to produce urine (essay – steps 1- 6) 1. glomerulus – a ball-shaped cluster of capillaries – where the blood enters the nephron – pressure of blood in the glomerulus squeezes the liquid portion of the blood out of the glomerulus through a sievelike filtering structure – blood cells are too large to pass through the sieve and most proteins are retained in blood by their size and charged nature – other small molecules such as salts, amino acids, glucose, water, and urea pass easily into the filtrate 2. Bowman’s capsule – the filtrate that leaves the blood enters a cup-shaped structure that surrounds the glomerulus – this is the starting of the tubelike nephron 3. proximal convoluted tubule – the urine is modified here – active transport pumps glucose, amino acids, sodium, and proteins back out of the filtrate – water is also reabsorbed by the process of osmosis which concentrates the urine and reduces the volume of the filtrate 4. loop of Henle – the filtrate passes to the loop of Henle – more water is absorbed by the process of osmosis – sodium leaves the filtrate – the volume of the filtrate is reduced 5. distal tubule – aldosterone – steroid hormone – increase the absorption of sodium from the urinary filtrate 6. collecting duct – hormone ADH (antidiuretic hormone – also called vasopressin) regulates the permeability of the collecting duct walls – may absorb more water – urine travels to ureter V. Thermoregulation and the skin A. two types of organisms 1. ectothermic – cold blooded – most of their heat energy escapes to the environment – body temperature is similar to the environment – also called poikilotherms 2. homeothermic – warm blooded – maintain their body temperature B. skin – protects the body from microbial invasion – melanocytes make melanin which protects the body from uv rays – receptor of stimuli – excretory organ – thermoregulatory organ 1. sweat glands – secrete a mixture of water, dissolved salts, and urea – both excretory and thermoregulatory function Sweat glands 2. subcutaneous fat – found in the hypodermis of the skin – insulates the body – hair traps and retains warm air at the skin’s surface – epinephrine can increase the metabolic rate which increases heat production – muscles can also generate heat by contraction (shivering) Subcutaneous fat C. other methods of regulation 1. panting – evaporates water from respiratory passages 2. hibernation – animal remains dormant over a period of weeks or months with body temperature maintained below normal VI. Malfunctions A. gall stones – collections of salts, cholesterol, or calcium that build up in the gall bladder B. gout – build up of uric acid in the joints C. Kidney stones – collections of salts, cholesterol, or calcium that build up in the kidneys