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Maintaining a Balance – Bio Notes Outcome 1 – LEFT-HAND SIDE Role of Enzymes Biological catalyst protein molecules that speed up chemical reactions in living organisms Enzymes assist in the metabolism by increasing reaction rate of the formation, breaking down and exchanging of molecules Body would not function without enzymes because these chemical reactions could not occur at a necessary rate to maintain body function Remain chemically unchanged prior to reaction Have an active site where substrate meets enzyme Binding of substrate molecule to enzyme, brings about temporary induced change to shape of enzyme = induced fit model The greater the substrate concentration, the greater the rate of reaction until all active sites are occupied – saturation point Most work at maximum efficiency at 37 degrees Celsius and rate of reaction decreases the further away from this temperature it goes. Four fundamental features: o Enzymes do not make a reaction occur that would not occur on its own they only make it happen faster o The enzyme molecule is not permanently altered by the reaction A single enzyme can be used time and time again to catalyze the same reaction o An enzyme can catalyze a reaction both forwards and in reverse o Enzymes are highly specific for the substrate they bind to they can only catalyze one reaction Identify pH as a way of describing the acidity of a substance pH is a way of describing the acidity of a substance Explain why the maintenance of a constant internal environment is important for optimal metabolic efficiency Metabolism is governed by enzymes When temperature and pH are not at optimum levels enzymes are not able to perform at their optimum hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 1 of 37 When temperature and pH diverge too far off their optimum levels within an organism, enzymes begin to denature and change shape permanently This change in shape disallows the enzymes to perform the role they had been assigned too disallowing optimal metabolic efficiency They work at the optimum metabolic efficiency when internal environment is constant and multi-cellular organisms regulate their internal environments to remain healthy Describe Homeostasis as the process by which organisms maintain a relatively stable internal environment Homeostasis is the process by which the internal environment is kept within normal limits regardless, of the external environmental conditions. Conditions needing regulation include: o Temperature o pH o Gas levels oxygen and CO2 o Water o Salt concentrations o Sugars o Nitrogenous wastes This allows the enzyme's optimal conditions to be met and the body to work efficiently and kept as stable as possible. 2 Stages of Homeostasis Detecting changes from the stable state Organisms pick up information from their external and internal environments and react appropriately Information that provokes response = Stimulus Stimulus – changes in… Type of Receptor Light Photoreceptor Temperature Thermoreceptor Sound, touch, pressure, gravity Mechanoreceptor Oxygen, Carbon Dioxide, water, Chemoreceptor pH, inorganic ions, nitrogenous wastes, glucose Electrical fields, magnetic fields Other specialised receptors Organism have special receptors to detect the stimuli hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 2 of 37 Counteracting Changes Once receptors have detected change a message is sent to the appropriate control center where an effector is put into place to counteract the change In mammals, effectors may take the form of muscles or glands o Muscles contract or relax, bringing about movement in the body e.g. shivering to maintain heat o Glands secrete a chemical substance e.g. saliva glands produce saliva when food is detected Outline the role of the nervous system in detecting and responding to environmental changes The nervous system, along with the endocrine system, carries the afferent and efferent messages to and from the control center during a negative feedback response Endocrine system produces hormones, made in specified glands and transported in the blood to the areas where their effectors will bring about a response Nervous system maintains and regulates an animals internal environment and respond to changes in the external environment The nervous system consists of the central nervous system (CNS) and the peripheral nervous system (PNS). The CNS consists of the brain and spinal cord The PNS consists of the sensory nerves and the effector nerves. When the environmental temperature begins to exceed a comfortable level for the body: o Temperature sensors in the skin detect the temperature change o A sensory neuron conducts a nervous impulse to the hypothalamus found in the brain o Nerve impulses pass this information from the receptors to effector neurons o Then onto effectors, such as blood vessels, sweat glands, endocrine glands and muscles. Identify the broad range of temperatures over which life is found compared with the narrow limits for individual species Temperature of an environment = ambient temperature Most life on earth lives in temperatures between 0-45 degrees hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 3 of 37 Exceptions found in -70 and up to 200 degrees at the poles and in black smokers in oceanic trenches Individual species, however, have much narrower temperature bands within which they can survive (eg humans can only survive unclothed and unsheltered from 27°C to 43°C) Below 0oC, cells risk ice crystals forming in them and above 45oC, proteins within cells may denature. Compare responses of named Australian Ectothermic and endothermic organisms to Endotherm changes in the ambient temperature and explain how these responses assist temperature Ectotherm Body regulation Temperature Endotherms Birds and mammals are endotherms. Environmental Temperature Body metabolism generates heat and maintains an internal body temperature that is independant of the external temperature. They require more food intake to provide for the energy used up during this process Red Kangaroo Homeostatic temperature of 36C Behavioural o Seeks the shade of rock crevasses and caves on hot days to stay cool by minimising exposure to sunlight o Licks its forelimbs where the blood vessels run close to the surface and heat is lost from the body and by wetting the surface with saliva, evaporation occurs promoting loss of heat from blood o Stands in the shade, tucks its tail under it and allow air to circulate around. Structural o Has a layer of fur providing insulation in cooler seasons o Spring like Achilles tendon recycling energy with every bound more efficient at high speeds Physiological o Changes bodily heat flow to not allow heat to the extremities of it's body in order to conserve heat o Shivers when cold hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 4 of 37 Ectotherms Organisms which rely on behavioural adaptation to regulate their body temperature through the environment E.g. plants, all invertebrates, fish, amphibians and reptiles Body temperature rises and falls with ambient temperature Aquatic ectotherms remain at temperature of the surrounding water, they do not show any specialised adaptations to regulate their body temperature Terrestrial ectotherms and endotherms experience a greater range of temperature changes and have receptors (thermoreceptors) to detect these changes and respond respectively Behavioural adaptations to temperature change: o Migration o Hibernation o Shelter o Nocturnal activity o Controlling exposure Crocodile ideal temperature of 31-32 degrees Plant Beech Tree Response Deciduous leaves drop in winter Daffodil Plant dies back leaving no parts above the ground Geraniums Plant produces smaller leaves to reduce surface area exposed to heat Mulga tree Thick silvery cuticle around leaves hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Benefit Reduces growth rate less energy needed and avoids damage to leaves Bulb is protected underground allowing it to survive winter and it will sprout again when weather is more favourable Creating less stomates disallowing increased transpiration which causes plant to dry out Reflects sunlight less evaporation/water loss and protects against over heating Page 5 of 37 o Orientate themselves so their maximum body surface is exposed to the sun in order to warm themselves o Arrange themselves so their relatively small head receives minimal heat while the body continues to heat o Open their mouths allowing the brain to cool through evaporation o When in the water they move around the environment to find cooler or warmer areas varying on the necessary temperature o In extreme cold they dig burrows under water o In extreme heat, they remain in the water in order to prevent dehydration. Identify some responses of plants to temperature change Respond to change by altering growth rate – hence seasonal growth In extreme weather, many plants may die but leave dormant seeds with thick protective layer Alternatively, some die above ground, leaving roots, rhizomes, bulbs or tubers to survive underground – these then sprout again when conditions are favourable Vernalisation: exposure to cold conditions that some plants require before they can develop flowers Outcome 2 – RIGHT-HAND SIDE Test the effect of increased temperature, change in pH, and change in substrate concentrations on the activity of named enzymes Increased temperature: Gelatine as substrate, pineapple juice as enzyme – heat juice Change in pH: as above – mix juice with equal volume of vinegar Change in substrate concentrations on the activity of named enzymes: same as above - add more jelly All leads to less breakdown of the jelly hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 6 of 37 Milk procedure: Change in temperature Make a rennin solution by dissolving a junket tablet in distilled water Add the same amount of rennin solution to a number of test tubes of milk, eg 7 test tubes Place test tubes in different water baths at temperature ranges such as 0oC, 10oC, 20oC, 30oC, 40oC, 50oC and 60oC. Make sure each water bath is kept at the temperature it has been allocated Time the interval between adding the rennin and curdling of the milk for each temperature Note that the variables kept constant in each test tube are the junket solution, the pH of the solution, the type of milk and the quantity of milk in each test tube Change in pH: Make a rennin solution the same as was done in the previous and add hydrochloric acid of various concentrations and with known pH levels each into a different solution, labeling each with pH level Add the same amount of rennin solution with the varying pH to six test tubes of milk Place in a water bath kept at a constant temperature of 37oC Time the interval between adding the rennin and curdling of the milk in each test tube Note that the variables kept constant in each test tube are the junket solution, the type of milk, the temperature of 37oC, and the quantity of milk in each test tube. Change in substrate concentration: Make different concentrations of the substrate by diluting the milk using different amounts of powdered milk to get different concentrations equal amounts of liquid with different and noted milk concentration Add the same amount of rennin solution to each test tube of milk Place in a water bath kept at a constant temperature of 37oC Time the interval between adding the rennin and curdling of the milk Note that the variables kept constant in each test tube are the type of milk, the temperature of 37oC, and the quantity of milk in each test tube. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 7 of 37 Develop a model and a feedback mechanism Outcome 2 – LEFT-HAND SIDE Identify the forms in which each of the following is carried around mammalian blood: Substance Carbon Dioxide Oxygen Water Salts Lipids Nitrogenous Waste Other Products of Digestion Form Mainly as hydrogen carbonate ions, some as carbaminohaemoglobin, some dissolved in the plasma Attaches itself to haemoglobin Oxyhaemoglobin Water molecules Dissolved ions in the plasma With phospholipids and cholesterol in a protein coated package Chylomicrons Urea, uric acid and creatinine dissolved in blood plasma As separate molecules e.g. glucose, amino acids hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Carried By Red blood cells and plasma Red blood cells Plasma (makes up 90% of plasma) Plasma Lymph and plasma Plasma Plasma Page 8 of 37 Explain the adaptive advantage of Haemoglobin Structure: Composed of 4 haem units forming a complexing protein globin Each haem unit is a ring structure with iron in the center allowing it to bind to oxygen forming oxyhaemoglobin Each red blood cell can carry 280 million haemoglobin molecules Function of Haemoglobin Transports of Oxygen to body cells from lungs Transports of some Carbon Dioxide from body cells to lungs – Carbaminohaemoglobin Conversion of some Carbon Dioxide to hydrogen carbonate ions via enzyme carbonic anhydrase Produces hydrogen ions – separates acid Buffering of the hydrogen ions – for protection Major role of Hb is transport of Oxygen o Oxygen is not very soluble in water o Most is carried by Hb o Interaction of iron ions with oxygen binds oxygen to Hb – Oxyhaemoglobin o This occurs when pressure (concentration) of oxygen is very high e.g in lungs o Bond is broken when oxygen pressure (concentration) is low e.g. in body cells hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 9 of 37 Adaptive Advantages of Hb Oxygen is minimally soluble in water which makes up 90% of blood plasma Therefore it carries majority of the oxygen around the body allowing respiration to take place These organisms are then far more efficient and effective operators of their environment than their anaerobic competitors Hb molecules unload very quickly in tissues when oxygen is low and bind very quickly when oxygen is high This is due to the increase in ease with which the 2nd, 3rd and 4th molecules are loaded/unloaded after 1st Relates to temperature: at low temperatures, when more energy is required to sustain body temperature, graph becomes more upright – quicker and vice versa Relates to pH: decrease in pH changes shape of molecule to release oxygen more easily because the lowered pH will decrease Oxygen saturation hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 10 of 37 Compare the structures of arteries, capillaries, and veins in relation to their function Vessel Artery Diagram Vein Capillary How the structure relates to function - Carries blood from heart to body - Three tissue layers: endothelium as a lining, smooth muscle to contract the vessel and connective tissue to allow for expansion - Small diameter, thick walled, elastic and muscular to withstand high pressure - The elastic fibres maintain blood pressure and send blood in spurts towards body tissues via the vessels expanding and recoiling with heartbeat - Carries blood back to heart after passing through the capillaries - Thinner walls, less muscle and larger diameter than of arteries as blood flows at a lower pressure - One-way valves and surrounding muscles keep blood flowing in a single direction - Single, thin endothelium layer large surface area to allow for a faster rate of diffusion of nutrients in and out of the capillary to surrounding cells - Diameter of a single cell - Surround tissues cells so that no cell is too far from a capillary to receive nutrients Describe the main changes in the chemical composition of the blood as it moves around the body and identify tissues in which these changes occur Blood flows through two systems: Pulmonary o Pulmonary system serves to increase levels of Oxygen and decrease levels of CO2 o Blood flows from heart to lungs and back to heart again o Blood travels in the pulmonary artery from the right ventricle to the lungs where carbon dioxide is released into the alveoli of the lungs and then released out of the body hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 11 of 37 o Oxygen is picked up from the alveoli and diffused into the red blood cells to then be taken back to the heart Systemic o Blood flows from the heart to the rest of the body, except the lungs, and then back to the heart again o Blood flows under high pressure out of the left ventricle and some fluid is forced out of the blood to become part of the body fluid o The left ventricle pumps oxygenated blood to the rest of the body, and as this blood circulates in capillaries, oxygen is delivered to the cells and carbon dioxide is picked up o Any ions or nutrients (e.g. glucose for respiration) required by cells also leave the blood and waste products of metabolism (urea, CO2) enter the blood o Other waste products, such as urea, are also picked up from the liver and transported in the blood to the kidneys o Blood flowing through the kidneys loses it's urea and has it's water and salt composition balanced o Blood flowing to the small intestines collects the products of digestion (e.g glucose and amino acids) and transports them to the liver where the level of many circulating substances is controlled o Deoxygenated blood returns to the heart via the inferior and superior vena cava hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 12 of 37 Outline the need for oxygen in living cells and explain the removal of carbon dioxide from cells is essential Oxygen is necessary for Cellular Respiration – process by which cells obtain energy from glucose Oxygen combines with glucose in a sequence of enzyme controlled steps during cellular respiration to release chemical energy as ATP, the chemical energy needed by cells for their metabolism Glucose + Oxygen Carbon Dioxide + Water + Energy (in form of ATP) Although glucose and other food molecules are energy rich, energy stored in them must be converted into a form that living cells can use for metabolism Carbon Dioxide is produced in cells as a waste product of chemical respiration When CO2 reacts with water (in the cytoplasm of cells or in the plasma of blood), it forms carbonic acid Build up of carbonic acid is toxic as it lowers the pH of the cell and bloodstream, affecting homeostatic balance A low pH would prevent enzymes from functioning optimally and this affects cell functioning by reducing metabolic efficiency in the body Therefore the removal of CO2 must be removed to prevent a lowering of the pH in the body cells to ensure an optimal environment for enzyme function is maintained Describe current theories about processes responsible for the movement of materials through plants in xylem and phloem tissue Xylem transport of water and dissolved minerals Structure o No nucleus o No air spaces o Vessels Cells placed on top of another with the cross wall removed Dead, hollow tubes Have pits and cross walls are perforated Provide support Supply water via transpiration pull o Tracheids hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 13 of 37 Still have cross-walls not perforated; their ends are tapered so they meet up with each other Primary wall: first wall of cellulose Secondary wall: inside primary wall thickens xylem to strengthen deposited in particular patterns e.g. rings, spirals, just around pits, reticulate (not a full wall, just a reinforcement) o Pits: Allow for bypassing of blocked vessels Transport o Water only goes upwards o If there is a blockage it moves through a pit and continues to go upwards o Pulled by Transpiration pull brings minerals into water via cohesion of water molecules o Root pressure pushes water up to start o Capillarity water adheres to cell walls and each molecules adheres to the one before it and transpiration pull brings it up o Large surface are to volume ration allows water to adhere to cell walls and travel further up with less activity capillarity (capillaries are very thin) Phloem transport of organic materials (water and glucose) Structure o Consists of phloem parenchyma o Sieve tube cells (either side of the sieve tube element) Cytoplast in strands through sieve tube elements o Companion cells (take nucleus) Transport o Travels in two directions at different times o In summer when extra glucose is made, it can either be stored as starch in the mesophyll OR it is moved downward by translocation in the phloem from the source (chlorenchyma in either palisade or spongy mesophyll) down o the sink in the cortex of the root and is stored there o In spring, when most growth takes place, the nutrients that has been stored in the roots (now the source) and is moved upwards by translocation, to the growing points of the plant hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 14 of 37 1. Glucose is actively taken from the leaves into the phloem because there is already a higher level of glucose in the phloem 2. Water (from xylem) will then passively follow the glucose into the phloem creating a high-pressure system 3. This then is moved downwards by translocation, towards the roots and glucose is actively removed from the water and taken into the cortex for storage and converted into starch 4. Water then flows back up to the xylem creating a low-pressure system at the roots because the water is leaving the root 5. There is a high-pressure system at the top (the source) because water is entering phloem there so water is now able to passively flow from high to low pressure points, transporting dissolved glucose with it In spring the roles change and the roots become the source and the growing point become the sink but the same process occurs hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 15 of 37 Outcome 2 – RIGHT-HAND SIDE Demonstrate the effect of dissolved carbon dioxide on the pH of water Method 1. Blow through a straw into a beaker of lime water for 30 seconds 2. Blow through a straw into a beaker of water with 3 drops of universal indicator for 30 seconds 3. Record any observations in colour change Results and Conclusion Chemical Colour change Limewate Colourless r cloudy Universal Green yellow Indicator The fact that the limewater went cloudy indicated that carbon dioxide was present The fact that the universal indicator turned yellow indicates that the carbon dioxide turns water acidic Use a light-microscope, and prepared slides to gather information to estimate the size of red and white blood cells and draw scaled diagrams of each REMEMBER: 1 micrometer = 1000 millimeters RBC 1. Use a grid slide divided into mm2 that has one mm square further divided into 10 equal squares 2. Under low power (100x) count the number of grids across the diameter of the field of view to approximately 1 decimal place if need be 3. Example diameter of the LP field view might be 1.5 mm, which is 1500 μm 4. Noting this diameter, place a prepared blood slide under LP 5. Count approximately how many RBC’s fit across the diameter of the field view there will be a level of estimation in this count 6. Move microscope to high power (400x) and count again to double check (you should count around a quarter of those that u counted on LP) hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 16 of 37 7. Take the diameter of the field view (1500 μm) and divide it by the number of RBC’s you counted across the diameter of your field view under LP 8. This is the approximate size of one RBC (probably between 6– 8 μm) 9. Draw these cells out, dispersed as you see them, according to the scale you have concluded on WBC 10. Look through the field view to find a WBC (larger cells with clearly defined and stained nuclei) 11.Either under LP or HP examine a WBC that is placed close to a few RBC and compare the size of the two 12. By comparing them, make an estimation as to the size of the WBC 13.WBCs should be almost double the size of RBCs so the approximate size would be 12–15 μm o Cannot use the same method as for the RBC because there are not enough WBCs in blood to be able to cover the diameter of a field view in a single sample slide 14. Draw the WBC according to the same scale as done with the RBC hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 17 of 37 Technologies that allow measurement of oxygen saturation and carbon dioxide concentrations in blood and describe and explain the conditions under which these technologies are used Arterial Blood Gas (ABG) Analysis o Takes blood samples from artery o Tested in Blood Gas Analyser for concentration of oxygen and concentration of CO2 and pH o When moving through a membrane, oxygen in the blood produces an electrical current while carbon dioxide changes the pH of the solution o Oxygen is measured according to magnitude of electric current present o CO2 measure according to the pH level o Invasive procedure o Delay between sampling and results o Provides vital info for critically ill patients – on ventilators or undergoing respiratory therapy Pulse Oximetry o A pulse oximeter receive information of light absorption transmitted to it by a connected clip that has a sensor in it o The sensor emits a light signal that passes through the skin o The colour of blood changes depending on it oxygen concentration o Measures absorption of light as light passes through the finger, ear-lobe, or toe, from light source to the photodetector (on either end of the clip) o This information is transmitted to the pulse oximeter and present in percentage form o Reading can be variable on dark skin or dark nail polish o Non-invasive o Rapid, continual monitoring of arterial blood Capnometry o Capnometer measures concentrations of respired gases using infrared light beam o Air is exhaled it capnometer which holds an infrared light source o The amount of light absorbed by the infrared beam depends on number of carbon dioxide molecules present o Samples measured often and very accurately hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 18 of 37 o Capnography is a more detailed form of this, giving a waveform display of CO2 concentrations over time showing dividing up different points of the respiratory cycle o Non-invasive o Monitors changes in carbon dioxide concentrations continuously o Can be used when patients oxygen levels are stable therefore having no need to have oxygen monitored Identify products extracted from donated blood and discuss the uses of these products Cellular: Platelets: used for control of hemorrhage in patients whose platelets have become defective or deficient e.g. leukemia Red Blood Cells: ideal for replacement of red blood cells lost during an emergency or surgery White Blood cells: occasionally used for patients who are not producing their own white cells or who have very low white cell counts and have serious bacterial infections Non-cellular Intragram: Used to reduce susceptibility to infections and manage many immune system diseases e.g. after bone marrow transplants/chemotherapy Factor VIII: management of haemophilia Immunoglobin: Temporary prevention of measles, rubella and hep. A Report on progress in the production of artificial blood and use available evidence to propose reasons why such research is needed Not actually blood, just an oxygen-carrier Does not includes other proteins e.g. clotting proteins and hormones Designed only to carry oxygen and carbon dioxide Free of infectious agents and allergens (non-toxic and disease free) No need to refrigerate and can be kept for more than a year, unlike human blood with life-span of 3 weeks Accepted by all blood groups allowing transfusion without testing artificial blood as no foreign markers hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 19 of 37 Readily available in large supplies Some people have religious objections to receiving blood transfusions e.g. jehova’s witnesses artificial blood is regarded as medicine rather than transfusions therefore allowing an alternative method of healing patients One cannot live off artificial blood, only serves to restore blood volume 2 types of oxygen carriers: Perfluorocarbon-based e.g. oxycyte and flurovent o Most promising form o Easily dissolves oxygen and transports o Non-toxic as products, compatible with body and can be broken down by body o Cheap to produce o Because of it’s chemical nature there is no genes no need to tissue match o Does not contain any biological contaminants o Combined with other materials e.g. lipids to form emulsion and injected into patient o Uses: surgery, trauma, oxygenation of tumours doing radiation, following major disaster Haemoglobin-based blood substitutes o Using haemoglobin from other animals e.g. cattle etc o Red blood cells from other animals are broken open and Haemoglobin is removed o Haemoglobin is then mixed with carrier compounds to form emulsion and injected o Effective oxygen carrier o No cell wall no markers to be detected as foreign by the body o Could contain chemicals o Problem: Haemoglobin, because of lack of protective membrane, it is vulnerable to degradation, which is toxic to the body cannot be used o Clinical trial ongoing and research continuing o Trying to make the molecule more stable to prevents its degradation by increasing bonds within the molecule Future directions new methods of forming haemoglobin being developed e.g. by synthesis (in bacteria plasmid) or recombinant DNA technology text pg. 183 hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 20 of 37 Blood volume is restored via a drip of normal saline mixture as per plasma, to replace plasma volume haemoglobin is added to this normal saline Normal saline increases blood pressure to maintain pressure in glomerulus to avoid kidney failure but does not transport oxygen Draw transverse and longitudinal section of phloem and xylem Outcome 3 – LEFT-HAND SIDE Explain why the concentration of water in cells should be maintained within a narrow range for optimal function Water maintains cell shape too little or too much can cause cell to shrivel or burst Water is the solvent for metabolic reactions in living cells Many molecules and all ions important for the life of the cell are carried in an aqueous solution and these diffuse to reaction sites through the water in the cell Water is the solvent in which most substances dissolve and is the transport medium for distributing them It is critical for proper functioning of these reactions the amount and concentration of water in the cell be kept constant Changes in the concentration of water will usually be accompanied by changes in the concentration of solutes hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 21 of 37 E.g. a decrease in water concentration leads to an effective increase in carbon dioxide concentration which decreases the pH which hinders the functioning of enzymes Living cells work best in an isotonic environment (where solute concentration is the same both inside and outside the cell) They are very sensitive to changes in solute concentration and may lose or take in large amounts of water – can cause death of the cell In large terrestrial mammals such as humans, the interstitial fluid that bathes their cells is kept isotonic to the internal solute concentration of the cells Explain why the removal of wastes is essential for continued metabolic activity Wastes from metabolic processes can be toxic to cells by slowing metabolism or poisoning cells E.g. CO2 (from respiration) can change the pH of cells and hinder the function of enzymes Even the accumulation of non-toxic wastes can be dangerous because increased concentration of products can interfere with reaction rates o Metabolic wastes are the product of metabolic reactions If they are not removed their concentration in the cell increases inhibiting the reactions that produce them, interfering with normal metabolic activity Nitrogenous wastes have the ability to change the pH of cells and interfere with membrane transport functions and may denature enzymes Ammonia is highly toxic and needs to be removed as quickly as possible or converted into a less harmful form Ammonia increases pH to make the fluid in cells and tissues basic There is a correlation between the type of wastes produced and the animals environment o Aquatic animals: excrete mostly ammonia (can be excreted directly into water as it is highly soluble) o Land animals: Conserve water but converting ammonia into less toxic forms so they can hold it for longer in the body and excrete it periodically hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 22 of 37 Identify the role of the kidney in the excretory system of fish and mammals Fish Primary role is osmoregulation – the regulation of the salt and water concentrations in the body Excretion of nitrogenous waste products (ammonia) occurs across the gills The kidneys adjust the levels of water and mineral ions in the fish’s body in order to maintain a constant concentration of internal fluid for the cells Freshwater Fish: o Bony fish living in fresh water maintain a higher concentration of solutes in their body than the concentration in the water outside – hypertonic to their surroundings o Water therefore tends to diffuse into the body and so the fish need to continually rid of the excess o Their kidneys produce copious amounts of very dilute urine in an almost continuous stream in order to achieve this o As fresh water has a lower concentration of ions than the fish do, the kidneys actively reabsorb salts to prevent their loss Saltwater Fish: o Bony saltwater fish have the opposite problem – their internal body fluids are less concentrated than the surrounding water o To avoid water loss from their body, mine fish keep drinking salt water o They absorb the water and salts o The water is retained and the salts actively excreted, some via the gills and some via the kidneys salt water bone fish excrete very little urine o Marine cartilaginous fish (sharks and rays) have their tissues isotonic with the sea water so there is no net movement of water in or out avoiding osmoregulation problems of bony fish hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 23 of 37 Mammals Regulate the internal salt and water concentrations in the blood Excrete urea, the nitrogenous waste produced by mammals Maintains precise balance between waste disposal and needed salt and water concentrations Deamination o Proteins are made from amino acids they are made, used and broken down in cell metabolism o Mammals are unable to store amino acids so excess becomes nitrogenous waste to be removed o These excess amino acids are transported to the liver where they are broken down in a process called deamination this involves removing the part containing a nitrogen to form urea o The remainder is converted to a carbohydrate which may be stored or used immediately o Urea is transported by the blood to the kidneys and excreted in the urine Explain why the process of diffusion and osmosis are inadequate in removing dissolved nitrogenous wastes in some organisms Diffusion and osmosis are both examples of passive transport relying on random movement They will not occur unless a sufficient concentration gradient is present Diffusion is a slow process and non selective of solutes (therefore not useful for nitrogenous wastes) o All salts would be eliminated along with glucose and vitamins whereas the body needs to retain some salts and nutrients o Urine concentration in the collecting tube could never be greater than that in the blood vessels running into it, so the urine would be too dilute and too much water would be lost Osmosis deals with the movement of water across a semi permeable membrane and not wastes o Nitrogenous wastes would remain in the body and water would leave it hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 24 of 37 Distinguish between active and passive transport and relate these to processes occurring in the mammalian kidney Passive movement requires no energy from the cells since molecules move along a concentration gradient (from high to low gradient) o Diffusion: the movement of molecules from high to low concentration o Facilitated diffusion: movement of molecules using carrier protein molecules to transport them across the cell membrane o Osmosis: movement of water molecules across a cell membrane o Filtration: movement of water and other particles across a cell membrane caused by blood pressure o Limitations: it depends on the presence of a difference in concentration of substances (a concentration gradient) o It is also relatively slow (especially without a steep concentration gradient) Active transport uses energy to pump or carry materials across the membrane o Specific carrier proteins may bind with the substance and carry it through the membrane o Endocytosis is another type of active transport involves the formation of a pouch that carries the matter through the membrane Within the kidney Passive transport: o Filtration of blood occurring under the high blood pressure conditions of the Bowman’s capsule o The movement of some nutrients and hydrogen ions out of proximal tubule o Water moving via osmosis in to the blood from the descending limb of the loop of henle o Some salt excreted from the ascending limb o Some water transported into blood from distal tubule o Water transported into blood from collecting duct Active transport: o Nutrients and salt transported into blood from proximal tubule o Drug poisons transported into proximal tubule from blood o Salt transported into blood from ascending limb hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 25 of 37 o Salt, hydrogen carbonate transported into blood from distal tubule o Potassium and hydrogen ions transported into distal tubule from blood Explain how the processes of filtration and reabsorption in the mammalian nephron regulate body fluid composition Each kidney is made up of about one million small filtering units called nephrons in these structures, urine is produced There are three processes in the formation of urine: filtration, reabsoption and secretion Passive transport occurs in filtration and in the osmosis of water back into the blood Active transport occurs in the secretion of substances into the nephron, the active transport of nutrients back into the blood and the selective reabsoption of salts required by the body Filtration: o Commonly occurs throughout the entire nephron system especially within the Glomerulus and Bowman's Capsule where water, nitrogenous wastes, glucose, amino acids, vitamins, minerals, bicarbonate ions and hormones. o The large amount of plasma that also comes through the Glomerulus is due to the extremely high blood pressure present within this structure o This pressure forces fluids and dissolved substances through walls of the glomerular capillaries into the Bowman’s capsule o The pressure is so high in to glomerulus that some of the liquid from the blood is forced through the walls of the glomerulus into the Bowman’s capsule glomerular filtrate o Water, urea, ions, glucose, amino acids and vitamins are all small enough to be moved into the glomerular filtrate o Blood cells and proteins are too large to be removed o Filtration is a non-selective passive process many valuable components of the blood must be recovered by reabsorption hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 26 of 37 Reabsorption: o Occurs in the tubules o Water, salt and nutrients move by active transport from the tubule into the surrounding capillaries o Controls concentration of substances in body fluid e.g. some amino acids, glucose, vitamins, some water, and some salts are reabsorbed o Proximal tubule: active reabsorption of salts and nutrients e.g. glucose, Amino Acids and Potassium Ions o Movement of salt actively out of tubules causes water to follow passively o Most bicarbonate ions are reabsorbed here to maintain the constant pH of the blood and body fluids o Loop of Henle: the descending limb allows for the reabsorption of water through osmosis o The ascending limb allows for the passive and active transport of salts such as sodium to move out of the tubules and be reabsorbed o Distal tubule: Selective reabsorption to adjust the pH of the blood and level of salts o Walls are permeable to water but not salt water passes out by osmosis o Collecting duct: Water may be reabsorbed here but the amount is dependent on the body’s need at the time Secretion: A selective process by which the body actively transports substances from the blood into the nephron o Excess ions and chemicals such as drugs or poisons are secreted o Occurs in proximal and distal tubules Excretion: Excess water and solute are eliminated in the form of urine hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 27 of 37 Outline the role of the hormones, aldosterone and ADH (anti-diuretic hormone) in the regulation of water and salt levels in the blood Hormones are chemical messengers that travel in the blood they reach all parts of the body through the blood, but only certain target cells in organs respond to each hormone Aldosterone: hormone controlling reabsorption of salts (i.e. sodium ions regulating blood pressure and volume o Produced by the adrenal glands, situated above the kidneys o If there is a decreased blood volume and blood pressure (resulting from low salt concentrations, which causes water to be released) the output of the aldosterone is increased o Causes tubules to increase the reabsorption of sodium ions and decrease the reabsorption of potassium o When sodium ions re-enter the blood water follows by osmosis, and chloride by diffusion and so o Results in rise in blood pressure and volume o Less water and salts will be lost in urine o If the body has too much salt, the opposite occurs water is retained, the adrenals release less aldosterone and salt remains in the tubules Antidiuretic hormone (ADH): hormone controlling reabsorption of water regulating urine concentration and blood volume o It is made in the hypothalamus gland but stored in and released from the pituitary gland in the brain o Osmoreceptor cells in the hypothalamus monitor the concentration of blood o If there has been water loss from the body (from sweating etc), the blood is more concentrated than normal ADH is released into the blood and circulates to the kidneys o ADH increases the permeability of the walls of the collecting ducts to water o In the presence of ADH, water passes freely by osmosis out of the ducts back into the body o As the blood returns to normal concentration by negative feedback, less ADH is secreted o If blood concentration is low (eg. Drinking a lot of water) very little ADH is released. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 28 of 37 o The permeability of the collecting duct walls is decreased, less water is reabsorbed and more is passed out with the urine o Increased salt results in water retention controlled by ADH reduces the concentration but not the total amount of salt which is regulated by aldosterone Enantiostasis and its importance to estuarine organisms in maintaining appropriate salt concentrations Enantiostasis: the maintenance of metabolic and physiological functions in response to variations in the environment It causes compensatory change in the internal environment counteracting changes in external environment It is therefore less costly than homeostasis o Involves some physiological or compensatory change o Allows organism to tolerate extreme external environment change o Internal environment will change significantly o External environmental changes are extreme Estuarine organisms e.g. the blue crab o All estuarine organisms, experience large changes in salt concentration in their environment over a relatively short time span due to the tidal movement and mixing of fresh and salt water o Organisms that must tolerate wide fluctuations of salinity are said to be euryhaline o One strategy to withstand such changes in salt concentration is to allow the body's osmotic pressure to vary with that of the environment Organisms that do this, and therefore do not maintain homeostasis, are said to be osmoconformers o Most marine invertebrates are osmoconformers o However, as the salt concentration of body fluids in an osmoconformer changes, various body functions are affected, such as the activity of enzymes o For normal functioning to be maintained, another body function must be changed in a way that compensates for the change in enzyme activity o E.g. when a change in salt concentration in the body fluid which reduces the efficiency of an enzyme is hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 29 of 37 compensated for by a change in pH which increases the efficiency of the same enzyme Halophytes e.g. Mangrove o Plants adapted to living in salty environments o 3 main methods of controlling salt levels o Salt excluders: prevents entry of salt into root system by filtration passive and relies on transpiration o Salt excreters: have special glands, usually in the leaves, where salt is concentrated and then actively secreted from plant rain then washes the salt off o Salt accumulators: concentrate or accumulate salt in a part of the plant, usually the bark or older leaves, which are then shed from the plant Describe adaptations of terrestrial Australian plants that assist in minimising water loss Xerophytes are plants adapted to arid regions where there is little water available and the temperatures reach a high daily maximum Name of Response / Adaptation Benefit Plant Eucalyptus - Leaves hang vertically in - Tilted leaf ensure minimal heat midday sun absorption and water loss due to - Thick layer in leaves transpiration (waterproof) - Waterproof leaves and sunken - Sunken and fewer stomates also prevent water los due to stomates transpiration Hakea - Hard leathery, needle- Minimise water-loss due transpiration (needlebush) shaped leaves with - Provides opportunity for reabsorption reduced surface areas - Sunken and fewer stomates Desert - Reduced SA leaves - Decreases water loss from Plant (cylindrical) transpiration - Stomates open during the - Reduces area for absorption of solar hottest part of the day radiation reducing transpiration, therefore heat loss Acacia - Use of phyllodes rather - Phyllodes, unlike leaves, do not lose than leaves for water in transpiration photosynthesis - Small or highly dissected leaves lose - Small bipinnate leaves heat far quicker than large leaves hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 30 of 37 Structure of the mammalian kidney by dissection, and use a model or visual resource to identify the regions involved in the excretion of waste products Risk Assessment Hazard Glass slides may break and cut someone Microscope may fall off bench onto someone’s foot Scalpel may cut someone Scissors may cut someone Consequence Leads to blood loss and infection of wounds Could break or seriously damage foot Precaution Handle with care and have proper glass disposal facility available Leads to blood loss and infection of wounds Leads to loss of blood and infection of wounds Handel with great care and immediately identify authority if this should happen Keep microscope at a safe distance from the edge of the bench Handel with great care and immediately identify an authority should this happen Method: 1. Place kidney on the dissecting tray and try to locate and gently separate the three tubes at the concave surface of the kidney 2. Draw and label an external side view of the kidney 3. Use a scalpel to cut a median longitudinal section of the kidney, starting at the convex surface. Do not cut the tubes and leave the two halves of the kidney attached to them 4. Draw the internal structure of the kidney and label the structure, noting the dark outer cortex, containing thousands of nephrons and their associated blood capillaries, the lighter and striped medulla and its many tubules, the hollow pelvis in the concave part of the kidney, and the opening to the ureter 5. Insert a probe into the opening to the ureter, the hole at the centre of the pelvis, to observe where it ends 6. Under the microscope, observe a prepared slide of kidney tissue from the cortex and locate the filtration units of the neprhons, identify the Bowman’s capsule and the glomerulus 7. Make your own labeled diagram of the image observed under the microscope LONGITUDINAL SECTION OF KIDNEY hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 31 of 37 MICROSCOPIC STRUCTURE Macroscopic Component Ureter Capsule Cortex Function Urine to the bladder Outer protective coating Where glomerulus is located Medulla Made up of thousands of pyramids made up by collecting ducts Urine accumulates here before moving down to the bladder Microscopic Function Filtration unit Pelvis Component Nephron Malpighian Body Bowman’s Capsule Form the blood filtrate Glomerulus Knot of capillaries under high pressure, filtering blood that enters due to extreme pressure Filter for molecules filtering out of glomerulus, sending them into the proximal tubule and holding back blood proteins hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Structure Outer cortex is darker due to intensity of vascularisations More stripey – tubules here Structure Malpighian body proximal convulsion loop of Henle distal convolutions Combination of Bowman’s Capsule and Glomerulus Thin and porous to filter through small molecules but NOT blood proteins capillaries are distanced from BC wall by pillars to allow particles to move through capillary and then through BC without the pores of the two having to lining up Wider afferent and thinner efferent vessels causes pressure build up– filtration process e.g. water, salt molecules NOT blood proteins Page 32 of 37 Proximal tubule Loop of Henle Distal tubule Collecting duct All glucose, all sugar is reasbsorped by diffusion (more sugar in convulsion than surrounding blood vessels) and then actively reabsorb the rest, some salt is reabsorbed by diffusion, amino acids are reabsorbed by diffusion and then actively, due to the concentration of the blood now, some water will move by osmosis back into the blood vessels Descending tube: only permeable to water due to the very salty environment water moves back into the blood via osmosis Ascending tube: only permeable to salt – more salt is removed back to the blood actively – hormones (Aldosterone) can control how much salt is reabsorbed Responsible for mineral balance, expelling extra hydrogen Most water is reabsorbed and remaining urine is sent to ureter Microvilli in tubule increases surface area for reabsorption applies to all tubules Capillaries surrounding loop of henle and entire nephron are travelling in the opposite direction to the tubules for maximum reabsorption Compare the process of renal dialysis with the function of the kidney Haemodialysis: o Most common method and uses artificial kidneys o Blood is sent through is tiny tubules to increase surface area to volume ratio in order to absorb more of the toxins and dialysis fluid is bathing these tubes o The dialysis fluid is perfect plasma – takes away any toxins and gives blood any missing or compensatory plasma o Toxins and wastes are removed by diffusion and water moves by osmosis and ultrafiltration across artificial membrane o Pores in membrane allow diffusion of small ions but prevent large plasma proteins leaving the blood o An anticoagulant is administered to stop clotting in dialysis tubing hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 33 of 37 Peritoneal Dialysis o Portable o Canular is attached to wrist, ankles or stomach, fluid pumped in at night and released during the day Present information to outline the general use of hormone replacement therapy in people who cannot aldosterone Addison’s disease – adrenal cortex produces insufficient levels of aldosterone Shortage of aldosterone can cause kidneys to lose the ability to maintain a proper balance of sodium and potassium causing decrease in blood pressure and volume Hormone replacement therapy supplement hormones are ingested, either orally or injected To correct Addison’s disease, fludrocortisone acetate (Florinef) Kidney Blood filtered in nephron Capillaries travel in opposite direction to nephron for maximum reabsorption Reabsorbs own nutrients Maintains homeostasis Interstitial fluid removes metabolic wastes and it can be recycled Urine is formed Passive and active transport in waste removal Works 24/7 High pressure filtration in Bowman’s Capsule Blood doesn’t clot is administered hscintheholidays.com.au Renal Dialysis Blood filtered in artificial tubing Blood tubing travels in opposite direction to dialysis fluid for maximum reabsorption Compensates for lost nutrients by absorbing nutrients from Dialysis fluid Homeostasis controlled by a supplemented diet and Dialysis Dialysis solutions removes metabolic waste and cannot be recycled to large amounts are needed Used dialysis fluid is the equivalent of urine Only passive transport used Used for about 15 hours per week No pressure, creating slower process compensated for by increased tubing convulsions Anti-clotting agent added All Rights Reserved. Page 34 of 37 Must be monitored carefully to avoid fluid retention and high blood pressure Compare and explain the differences in urine concentration of terrestrial mammals, marine fish, and freshwater fish Type of Terrestrial Marine fish Freshwater fish organism organism Excretory Urea Ammonia Ammonia product Excess ions excreted Ion concentrations are from salt glands maintained by absorption in the gut and the active uptake of ion in the gills Where waste is Kidney Gills - But some is Gills – freshwater easily excreted converted to urea flushes ammonia from accumulating in the gills blood to maintain osmotic balance Concentration Varies Concentrated to Very dilute to eliminate depending on retain as much water as much water as water intake, as possible possible activity and environment Amount Varies Small amounts to Large amounts to released depending on retain as much water eliminate as much water water intake, as possible as possible activity and environment Explanation Water can be Extremely high salt and Lower salt content in scarce, and ion concentration water than in fish evaporates (hypo-osmotic) fish (hyper-osmotic) fish easily so it must lose a lot of water via loses ions via diffusion be conserved osmosis and gain ions and gains water via by diffusion osmosis Osmoregulation Osmoregulation hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 35 of 37 Explain the relationship between the conservation of water and the production and excretion of concentrated nitrogenous wastes in a range of Australian insects and terrestrial animals Feature Formation and energy required Toxicity Ammonia Formed immediately after the amino acid group is removed from protein uses little energy Very toxic Solubility Highly soluble in water Animals Bony fish, aquatic invertebrates, aquatic amphibians Urea Produced by liver in process that requires more energy than ammonia Uric acid Synthesis requires more energy that urea synthesis Less toxic than ammonia Soluble – can be moderately concentrated to conserve water Terrestrial amphibians and mammals Not very toxic Not very soluble in water Insects, birds, and some dogs Insects Covered by a waxy coating impervious to water little water Have Malpighian tubules which collect water and uric acid from the haemolymph and empty it into the gut Useful substances and water are reabsorbed by the intestines and the wastes leave the body from the anus Terrestrial animal The Bilby and Spinifex hopping-mouse produce very concentrated urine and tolerate high levels of urea in their systems in order to conserve water in arid areas Discuss processes used by different plants for salt regulation in saline environments Halophytes such as the mangrove, found in estuarine environments have 3 mechanisms by which they remove prevent entry of salt in order to maintain salt concentrations. 1. Salt exclusion: prevents the entry into their root systems by filtration Passive process and relies on transpiration Eg. Grey Mangrove, Red Mangrove, Orange Mangrove hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 36 of 37 2. Salt excretion: special glands usually, located on leaves, where salt is concentrated and then actively secreted from plant Active process and relies on rain to wash the salt off Eg. Grey Mangrove, River Mangrove 3. Salt accumulation: accumulate salt in part of the plant usually the bark or older leaves, which are then shed (sacrificial leaves) Eg. Milky Mangrove Perform a first hand investigation to gather information about structures in plants that assist in the conservation of water Structure Function Conservation of H20 Eg. of Plant Waxy/ reflective leaves Reflects sunlight and prevents osmotic movement of water Eucalyptus Sunken or fewer stomates Traps water that leaves stomates in pits, and lessens stomates Increase SA: V ratio Fewer stomates Reduces SA of the leaf exposed to sunlight Prevents plants from reaching a high temperature resulting water loss through evaporation Impermeable to water preventing water escaping as a result of evaporation, root pressure etc. Minimise water-loss due transpiration Provides opportunity for reabsorption Reduces area for absorption of solar radiation reducing transpiration, therefore heat loss Minimises the internal temperature of the plant Water loss is preserved as it does not need to be used for evaporative cooling Same benefites of glucose formation and metabolism without the water loss Small (cylindrical) leaves Hanging leaves Phyllodes or caldodes instead of leaves Perform photosynthesis but do not lose water in transpiration hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 37 of 37 Hakea and Eucalyptus Desert plant Eucalyptus Acacia and prickly pear respectivel y Biology - Maintaing a Balance 1.1.1 Identify the role of enzymes in metabolism, describe their chemical composition and use a simple model to describe their specificity on substrates Enzymes are catalysts that facilitate chemical reactions Role of enzymes in metabolism Metabolism is a general term used to describe all the chemical reactions that occur within an organism Enzymes are biological catalysts which are in fact able to increase the rate of chemical reactions but remain unchanged throughout the entire reaction Without enzymes, metabolism would occur at a rate to slow to support life Chemical Composition of Enzymes An enzyme is a protein molecule made up of long chains of amino acids, joined together by peptide bonds forming a polypeptide chain The shape of the enzyme is usually determined by its role and the reaction it controls In enzymes the polypeptide chain is folded into a 3D globular shape The area of the enzyme that binds to the substrate is known as a an active site Specificity on Enzymes Enzymes are highly specific in their action: this means that each enzyme acts on one substrate only This is because the shape of the active site matches the shape of the substrate material Often enzymes help two substances to combine or for one substrate to split. There are 2 models that show enzyme activity. The Lock and Key Model This model suggests that the substrate fits exactly into the active site of an enzyme like a key and a lock It assumes that the enzyme has a rigid and unchanging shape. This makes the enzyme highly specific to that substrate The Induced Fit Model © (2012) All Rights Reserved www.hscintheholidays.com.au 1 of 27 For more info, go to States that the binding of the enzyme to the substrate induces a temporary shape in the enzyme The new shape better accommodates the substrate and the reaction occurs Enzymes may be aided with the help of co-enzymes (small molecules that help the enzyme to act) such as molybdenum. Cofactors are the same as enzymes but: If organic such as Zn2+, called co-factors If organic such as vitamins then called co-enzymes 1.1.2 Identify the pH as a way of describing the acidity of a substance pH is a scale which indicates the H + concentration in a substance on a scale of 0-14 As a result we are able to identify whether the substance is acidic (pH<7), basic (pH>7) or neutral (pH=7) The higher the concentration of hydrogen ions the lower the pH and vice versa 1.1.3 Explain why the maintenance of a constant internal environment is important for optimal metabolic efficiency Metabolic efficiency relies heavily upon the optimal operation of enzymes However a range of factors inhibit this such as pH, Temperature and Substrate Concentration It is known most enzymes can only work efficiently under a small range of conditions This work of enzymes at optimal capacity is essential to maintain optimum metabolic efficiency © (2012) All Rights Reserved 2 of 27 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au It ensures that external changes do not affect entire metabolic pathways producing essential compounds. E.g. haemoglobin The enzyme catalase found in yeast has an optimum temperature of 35 OC If conditions for optimal activity are not met (excess heat) the enzyme is known to become denatured, where the shape of the active site is destroyed, preventing activity 1.1.4 Describe homeostasis as the process by which organisms maintain a relatively stable internal environment Homeostasis is the process by which organisms maintain a relatively stable internal environment in response to changes in the internal and/or external environment This allows the enzyme's optimal conditions to be met and the body to work efficiently and kept as stable as possible. 1.1.5 Explain that homeostasis consists of two stages: detecting changes from the stable state counteracting changes from the stable state Detecting changes from the stable state Any change or information that provokes a response is called a stimulus Receptor: an organ or other part which receives a stimulus and transmits it to organism’s control centre Mechanoreceptors detect sound, touch, pressure, gravity Chemoreceptors detect oxygen, carbon dioxide, water, pH, ions, nitrogenous wastes, glucose Thermoreceptors detect temperature change Photoreceptors convert light stimuli into electrical signals Counteracting changes from the stable state After the receptor detects the change, it will respond by counteracting the change to ensure a stable environment is attained and maintained An effector receives the message from the control centre that an undesirable change must be counteracted, and causes a response to counteract the change and maintain a stable state (negative feedback) They may be muscles that cause movement, or glands that secrete a chemical substance 1.1.6 Outline the role of the nervous system in detecting and responding to environmental changes The nervous system works to regulate and maintain an animal’s internal environment in response to a change in the internal and/or external environment The nervous system consists of 2 parts: Central Nervous System (PNS) and the Peripheral Nervous System (PNS) The CNS is composed of the brain, spinal cord and retina. This part acts as the control centre for all the body’s responses. It receives information, interprets it and initiates a response The PNS is a branching system of nerves that connects receptors and effectors. These acts as communication channels and pass messages rapidly to the CNS and back The stimulus response pathway occurs as follows 1. Special endings on sensory nerves located in the PNS, such as heat sensors detect stimuli such as changes in heat, pressure or chemical conditions 2. Receptors relay messages that are processed within the CNS © (2012) All Rights Reserved www.hscintheholidays.com.au 3 of 27 For more info, go to 3. A response is formulated and the messages are relayed to effector organs or muscles that bring about the response 1.1.7 Identify the broad range of temperatures over which life is found compared with the narrow limits for individual species Ambient Temperature refers to the temperature of the external environment Ambient temperature at particular areas varies daily, monthly and seasonally and the range of ambient temperatures over the world is very large Life is found in this great range of ambient temperatures Life can be found in a range of -70 OC to 100OC (e.g. bacteria in snow, boling springs and undersea vents) While this range of ambient temperatures in which life is found is very broad, then range of ambient temperatures in which individual organisms can survive is very small E.g. Sugar Cane needs a warm frost free environment, thus it only grows in tropical and sub-tropical regions Mammals are generally found in an ambient temperature range of 0 OC to 45 O C 1.1.8 Compare responses of named Australian ectothermic and endothermic organisms to changes in the ambient temperature and explain how these responses assist temperature regulation Ectotherms Ectotherms are organisms that have a limited ability to control their body temperature as their cellular activates generate little heat by changing its behaviour through the day. Due to this they use the energy from their environment to regulate their body temperature The Central Netted Dragon is known to regulate its temperature by changing its behaviour through the day They sunbake during the morning to absorb heat which activates their daily body functions. Their level of activity during the day is determined by the ambient temperature Their skin is also darker in the cooler morning and evenings in an attempt to absorb as much heat as possible. While during they day their skin becomes much lighter in an attempt to lower the absorption of heat During the hottest part of the day, they retreat into their burrows to avoid the excess heat and the adverse affects it causes to their bodies Endotherms Endotherms use internal metabolic processes which generate heat to maintain a constant internal temperature independent of the ambient temperature The Red Kangaroo is able to generate heat through its own metabolism, heat from exercise and from the environment When resting the kangaroo loses heat through panting It has increased blood flow in vessels supplying the nasal membrane allowing heat loss through evaporation They also have a mass of superficial capillaries on their forelimbs. By spreading saliva on these, it is able to achieve heat loss through evaporation Also they stay in the shade and have decreased activity 1.1.9 Identify some responses of plants to temperature change Due to particular temperature extremes in their environment, plants are also required to develop responses to temperature changes © (2012) All Rights Reserved 4 of 27 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au Most desert plants such as the Spinifex have a typically reduced surface area which is able to reduce water loss and provide a smaller area for solar absorption May have shiny or hairy leaves which reflect solar radiation and reduce heat absorption Curling of Leaves may occur during temperature increases, reducing surface area exposed to sun light. This minimises heat absorption and water loss through evaporation at the leaf surface Plants such as the Eucalypts will open their stomata in the early morning but then close them near midday as temperature rises to prevent water loss through evaporation and transpiration Leaves on plants in hot dry area hang vertically to reduce their surface area exposed to sunlight. In cold shady areas, leaves from plants have a maximum surface area exposed to the sun Responses to cold: Vernalisation: plants such as daffodils require exposure to cold conditions before they will develop flowers Plants may leave dormant seeds Die back of above-ground parts Plants usually alter growth rate; in tropical regions growth may cease below 15 degrees Frost-tolerant leaves In plants, when temperatures are very low, ice forms in spaces outside living cells. Inside of cell doesn’t freeze because concentration of ions in the cytosol is greater. Because water concentration is decreasing outside the cells (because ice is being produced), water moves out of the cells by osmosis, further increasing cytosol concentration, and lowering freezing point inside cells even further. Pliable cell membranes prevent cell rupture. 1.2.1 Identify data sources, plan, choose equipment or resources and perform a first-hand investigation to test the effect of: increased temperature change in pH change in substrate concentrations on the activity of named enzyme(s) 1.2.2 Gather, process and analyse information from secondary sources and use available evidence to develop a model of a feedback mechanism Homeostasis involves the detection of the change in the environment and the response to that change to maintain a stable internal environment The mechanism that brings about this change is called a feedback mechanism. In feedback systems, the response alters the stimulus In Endotherms a constant internal temperature of 36.1 OC to 37.8OC is maintained by an inbuilt thermostat called the hypothalamus Its role is to regulate the internal temperature by detecting and responding to changes in the stable state caused by stimuli Thermoreceptors within the skin inform the hypothalamus of changes in the internal and external temperature © (2012) All Rights Reserved www.hscintheholidays.com.au 5 of 27 For more info, go to The hypothalamus can then respond to an increase in temperatures by sending messages through the PNS and activating cooling mechanisms such as vasodilation ( blood vessels dilate, moving closer to the skin surface allowing heat to escape), sweating and panting The hypothalamus can then respond to a decrease in the internal temperature by directing the PNS to activate heating mechanisms such as increased muscle activity (shivering), vasoconstriction (constricts blood vessels, reducing heat loss t0 surrounding areas). The involvement of the hypothalamus and PNS in dealing with temperature regulation is an example of a negative feedback mechanism Diagram of FEEDBACK: 1.2.3 Analyse information from secondary sources to describe adaptations and responses that have occurred in Australian organisms to assist temperature regulation Behavioural Physiological © Endothermic Red Kangaroo licks forearms in hot weather Mountain pygmy possum hibernates in winter Spinifex hopping mouse is nocturnal Spinifex hopping mouse digs burrows to escape high temperatures Ectothermic Bogong moths migrate to Australian Alps in summer to aestivate (in which they gather in caves, their metabolism slows and their body temp drops in order to assist with temperature regulation) Central netted dragon alters its posture Central netted dragon climbs into bushes to seek cooler conditions off the ground, and basks in the sun when it needs to get warmer Magnetic termites pack walls of their mounds with insulating wood pulp Magnetic termites orient the long axis of their mounds north-south Platypus uses a counter-current exchange system in its feet to reduce heat loss Mountain pygmy possum hibernates in winter, body temperature drops and metabolic rate slows Bogong moths avoid ice crystals forming in cells by reducing temperature of body fluids below their usual freezing point Thorny devil is coloured pale when external temperature is hot to reflect sun’s rays, and can change (2012) All Rights Reserved 6 of 27 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au Superb Parrot contracts the muscles controlling its feathers in cold conditions, causing its cloak to become ruffled up. This maintains a layer of trapped air acting as insulation Structural to a darker colour when it is cool to absorb heat - Bilby has claws on front feet to dig burrows to escape the heat Bilby: Large thin ears allow for quick heat loss 2.1.1 identify the form(s) in which each of the following is carried in mammalian blood: carbon dioxide oxygen water salts lipids nitrogenous waste other products of digestion Mammalian blood is considered to be a tissue rather than a liquid. It consists of cells in an extracellular fluid called plasma. 45% of blood is cellular and 55% is plasma CARBON DIOXIDE: It is produced as a waste product of respiration in body cells and occurs in high concentrations. It is known to diffuse into the bloodstream from body cells and is carried in 3 ways After entering the bloodstream it may: 1. Be converted into carbonic acid and then changed into hydrogen carbonate ions. This change from carbon dioxide to carbonate ions happens on the red blood cells through the enzyme carbonic annhydrase. The ions are transported dissolved in the plasma (only 70% of the carbon dioxide). 2. 23% of CO2 binds to haemoglobin and forms carbaminohaemoglobin 3. 7% is dissolved directly in the plasma OXYGEN: Essential for body respiration and is inhaled through the lungs, bringing it across the respiratory surfaces of the lung. It binds with haemoglobin in red blood cells, forming oxyhaemoglobin. WATER: Water is the solvent of plasma and travels in plasma as water molecules Makes up 60% of the volume of blood SALTS: In blood, salts transported directly in plasma as dissolved positive and negative ions. E.g. Cl- and Mg2+ LIPIDS: Many lipids are water insoluble and only travel in the blood when they are coated in proteins becoming lipoproteins and travel as HDL or LDL Digested lipids are changed into triglycerides in the lining of the small intestine These can then be transported as chylomicrons which are clusters of triglycerides, phospholipids and cholesterol, wrapped in a coat of protein. © (2012) All Rights Reserved www.hscintheholidays.com.au 7 of 27 For more info, go to These are released into the lymph and eventually pass into the veins where they are transported in the plasma to the tissue cells NITROGENOUS WASTES: Nitrogenous waste is produced by the deamination of proteins and nucleic acids (removal of nitrogens as part of amine group) The waste is ammonia, but as this is toxic most mammals convert the ammonia to urea which can be transported in blood plasma Conversion occurs in the liver and the kidney’s filter the urea from the blood OTHER PRODUCTS OF DIGESTION: They are mainly water soluble and transported in the plasma Includes amino acids, sugars, glycerol and vitamins 2.1.2 Explain the adaptive advantage of haemoglobin Haemoglobin is a globular protein made of 4 polypeptide chains which enclose a haem group Each haemoglobin consists of a protein molecule called globin and 4 pigmented molecules made of a compound called haeme each of which has an atom of iron at its centre The iron gives blood its red colour Each of these haemoglobin molecules is able to bind with 4 oxygen molecules or 8 atoms When one oxygen molecule combines with 1 of the haeme group, there is a slight change in the shape of the molecule which increases the affinity of haemoglobin for more oxygen The adaptive advantage If blood carried oxygen without haemoglobin, the oxygen would have to be dissolved directly into the plasma However oxygen is not very soluble in water If oxygen was carried only by being dissolved in blood plasma, 100mL of water would only dissolve 0.2mL of O2 The presence of haemoglobin increases the oxygen carrying capacity of blood by 100 times allowing 20mL of O2 per 100mL of blood. Oxygen can combine with haemoglobin to form oxyhaemoglobin increasing the oxygen carrying capacity of blood Mammals are endotherms and use the heat from internal metabolic processes to maintain body temperatures It is therefore an adaptive advantage for mammals to have haemoglobin in their red blood cells to carry more O2 to release energy to maintain body temp. 2.1.3 Compare the structure of arteries, capillaries and veins in relation to their function 2.1.4 Arteries Carry blood away from heart (at high blood pressure)and this placed on arteries from the heart pumping creates great stress. This is why the arteries are thick walled, elastic and muscular. © (2012) All Rights Reserved 8 of 27 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au Arteries have muscle fibres in them which can contract and relax with each heartbeat allowing for the maintenance of constant blood pressure and rate of blood flow to all tissues The contracting and relaxing of the arterial walls is also what causes the pulse on your wrist or neck). Arteries have a smaller lumen than veins Veins: Capillaries: Veins carry blood back to the heart at comparatively lower pressures and as a result have thinner walls than arteries, less muscles and a wider diameter (lumen) Since there are no thick muscular walls to keep the blood pulsing along, the veins have a series of valves which prevent the blood from back-flowing on its way back up to the heart. The blood in veins is kept moving through the contraction of muscles surrounding your veins such as leg muscles Capillaries are an extension of the inner layers of the arteries and veins and they are the basic structures that connect arteries and veins Capillaries are only one cell thick, and are so narrow, that only one red blood cell can pass at a time. Capillaries surround all tissue cells Thus, they provide a very large surface area over which exchange of materials between blood and body cells can occur. Diameter of 7-10 micrometers 2.1.4 Describe the main changes in the chemical composition of the blood as it moves around the body and identify tissues in which these changes occur Pulmonary circuit: It is mainly composed of the lungs and the heart. Blood enters the right atrium of the heart via the vena cava: – The blood is deoxygenated, and high in carbon dioxide – It is low in glucose and other nutrients; it is also high in urea, other nitrogenous wastes and various poisons. As the heart beats, the right ventricle pumps the blood through the pulmonary artery, to the lungs: – Here the blood gains oxygen, and loses its carbon dioxide. – The blood then enters the left atrium via the pulmonary vein. Systemic circuit The left ventricle pumps oxygenated blood throughout the body through the aorta. As the blood moves throughout the body, various changes occur – The blood loses oxygen and gains carbon dioxide in all body cells, as respiration occurs. Glucose levels also drop. Liver: Levels of glucose are regulated – excess glucose is changed to glycogen, or glycogen stores are changed to glucose Excess amino acids are changed to ammonia, and then to urea Poisons are also reduced, as the liver changes them to less toxic forms Intestines: Levels of nutrients from digestion increase. © (2012) All Rights Reserved www.hscintheholidays.com.au 9 of 27 For more info, go to Glucose, amino acids, ions, lipids and other substances from food enter the blood. The increase is through the small intestines reabsorption of food Kidneys: Salt and water levels are regulated All urea is removed, toxins are excreted into the urine The changed blood, again highly deoxygenated, then flows back to the pulmonary circuit. Bone Marrow New red blood cells are picked up as well as white blood cells Brain Picks up hormones needed to regulate body functions from a number of glands including the pituitary gland Reproductive Organs Picks up hormones for control over reproductive cycle Pancreas Picks up hormones such as insulin which assists in maintaining blood glucose levels 2.1.5 Outline the need for oxygen in living cells and explain why removal of carbon dioxide from cells is essential All living cells are known to require oxygen for respiration C6H12O6 + 6O2 6H2O + 6CO2 38ATP Cells require energy to survive, energy which comes from respiration which requires energy Respiration produces water, carbon dioxide and energy needed for metabolic processes A by product is CO2 which when dissolved in water produces H2CO3 which is able to disassociate into its ions and increase the hydrogen ion concentration, lowering the pH The activity of enzymes is optimum in a very limited pH range Under such a decreased pH, the metabolic pathways of the organism are affected and thus removal of CO2 from the organism is essential 2.1.6 Describe current theories about processes responsible for the movement of materials through plants in xylem and phloem tissue Xylem The xylem transports water and dissolved mineral ions in one direction from the roots to the leaves The water enters the roots through osmosis but energy may be required for the uptake of ions if it is against the concentration gradient Transport of water depends on transpiration and the physical properties of water Water moves from the roots to the leaves where it is lost through transpiration at the stomata Evapouration of water from the leaf cells through the stomates initiates the pull of the transpiration stream Water is then drawn up the xylem tubes to replace this loss The movement of water through narrow tubes is known as capillarity and is caused by adhesion and cohesion © (2012) All Rights Reserved 10 of 27 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au Cohesion is where molecules tend to bind together causing the water to form a continuous stream up the plant, pulling it up, replacing any immediate water loss Adhesion, water sticks to the sides of the xylem tubes, pulling the water up Phloem The theory Movement of organic molecules. E.g. sugars, amino acids and hormones in the phloem is called translocation Enables a plant to distribute resources where they are needed, but especially to growing plants and reproductive structures such as fruits and seeds This forms of transport carries sugars from an areas of High hydrostatic pressure (source) to an area of low hydrostatic pressure (sink); known as source-path-sink system or pressure flow theory. It is driven by a pressure gradient generated osmotically In plants it is known there are sources of nutrients. E.g. leaf cells are a source of glucose and amino acids Both of these products as well as other nutrients are transported into the phloem by active transport in 1 of 2 ways: Symplastic Loading and Apoplastic Loading As sugars enter the phloem the concentration of phloem sap increases This causes the entry of water by osmosis from the surrounding cells as water concentration lowers. This resulting high hydrostatic pressure causes water and dissolved solutes to flow to an area of low hydrostatic pressure (the sink) A sink is a region of the plant where sugars and other nutrients are actively being removed from the phloem As sugars move out of the phloem the water does too as their is a higher concentration of water in the phloem. This reduces the pressure in sieve cells to normal 2.2.1 Perform a first-hand investigation to demonstrate the effect of dissolved carbon dioxide on the pH of water 2.2.2 Perform a first-hand investigation using the light microscope and prepared slides to gather information to estimate the size of red and white blood cells and draw scaled diagrams of each 2.2.3 Analyse information from secondary sources to identify current technologies that allow measurement of oxygen saturation and carbon dioxide concentrations in blood and describe and explain the conditions under which these technologies are used Technology Pulse Oximeter © (2012) All Rights Reserved www.hscintheholidays.com.au How it works Measures monitors the oxygen saturation of a patient's blood A peg like device that sits on the finger and measures the transmission of light through tissues 11 of 27 The conditions it is used Technique is non invasive and is painless allowing it to be used in various conditions Also used during surgeries to monitor patients under anaesthesia Also used for patients For more info, go to Works by emitting a red and infrared light at different wavelengths Absorption at these wavelengths differs significantly between oxyhaemoglobin and its deoxygenated form; therefore oxygen saturation can be determined from the amount of light absorbed Measures the amount of CO2 and O2 in the blood. Analysis evaluates how effectively the lungs are delivering oxygen and removing CO2 A blood sample usually taken from the radial artery is tested by electrochemical methods in a blood gas analyser It measures the saturation of oxygen by measuring how much O2 is attached to haemoglobin and comparing it to the maximum. Determines CO2 concentration by measuring bicarbonate content and blood pH levels Invasive technique that takes time between sampling and delay An instrument incorporating an Arterial Blood Gas Analysis (ABG) Capnometer © (2012) All Rights Reserved 12 of 27 For more info, go to undergoing medical ventilation Used when there are signs of dangerously low oxygen or carbon dioxide levels Helps for diagnosing as well as monitoring patients Helps to monitor patients under anaesthesia Non – invasive and portable www.hscintheholidays.com.au infrared dot detector assembly, used to analyse CO2 gases and in medical applications to monitor air exchange in the lungs of patients on ventilators or anaesthesia It can evaluate the respiratory conditions of spontaneously breathing patients capnometers can be used for inhome care and in general wards Generally the conditions under which these are used To assess respiratory diseases and other conditions that may affect the lungs, such as emphysema, pneumonia and silicosis To manage patients receiving oxygen therapy, mechanical ventilation or anaesthesia 2.2.4 Analyse information from secondary sources to identify the products extracted from donated blood and discuss the uses of these products When blood is donated it can be used immediately as whole blood to treat patients who have lost 20% or more blood or if their blood’s oxygen carrying capacity is reduced. Alternatively it can be separated into its individual products Red blood cells: Used to increase the amount of oxygen that can be carried to the body’s tissues; given to anaemic patients, or people whose bone marrow do not make enough red blood cells. Can be given to those who require blood after extensive losses Platelets: They are essential for the coagulation of the blood. Given to people with cancer of the blood (leukaemia or lymphoma). Patients undergoing chemotherapy, whose blood does not make enough platelets, are given this. Plasma: (Usually in the form of fresh frozen plasma ). This liquid portion of the blood, is given to people with clotting disorders (such as haemophilia), and also used to adjust the osmotic pressure of the blood (to pull fluids out of tissues). Some products are derived from plasma White blood cells: Infection fighting component of the blood. Very rarely given, but are used when cell count is very low or when the bodies white blood cells are not working properly © (2012) All Rights Reserved www.hscintheholidays.com.au 13 of 27 For more info, go to Immunoglobulins: Also called gamma globulins, immune serum, or antibodies, these are also infection fighting parts of the blood plasma. Given to people who have difficulty fighting infections, eg AIDS sufferers. 2.2.5 Analyse and present information from secondary sources to report on progress in the production of artificial blood and use available evidence to propose reasons why such research is needed There are various reasons as to why research into artificial blood is essential: 1. Antigen-antibody reactions to antigens on donated red blood cells are dangerous complications, so donor blood must be cross-matched and typed Can be avoided using artificial blood, when no red blood cells are given 2. Artificial blood can be stored for more than one year, compared with about one month for donor blood using standard methods 3. Donor blood can transmit viruses such as HIV. Some pathogens may escape screening. Many countries are prohibiting blood donations who have a risk of carrying the causative agent for bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) With artificial blood, pasteurisation may be used to remove all pathogens 4. Shortage of donor blood to help victims of emergencies, civil conflicts, and natural disasters. Artificial blood could be manufactured on a large scale, dropping prices and making it more readily available in poorer countries. The substitutes being developed have a number of advantages over real blood 1. They can be stored for up to 2-3 years 2. They are free of any infectious agents 3. They are readily available in large supply, solving the donor problem 4. All blood groups accept the alternatives removing the need for cross matching The main alternatives being developed are the following Perflurochemicals (perflurocarbons): Synthetic and inert, are completely sterile Cheap to produce, compared to using real blood. Can dissolve 5 times more oxygen than blood. Free of biological materials, therefore no risk of infections BUT - must be combined with other materials to mix in with the bloodstream (eg lecithin). This changes how well artificial blood can flow through blood vessels thus more research is needed Haemoglobin Based Oxygen Carriers (HBOCs): o Made from haemoglobin extracted from red blood cells o Haemoglobin is not contained in membrane - cross matching unnecessary o Can be stored for a long time o BUT - haemoglobin tends to oxidise to a different form, break down, and can no longer carry oxygen. This haemoglobin however must be subject to clinical trials as they are unprotected by cell membranes and thus unprotected from degradation Dextrose Solution: o Made of 4% glucose solution in a fluid with equal salinity to blood o Only used to restore blood pressure after accidents. © (2012) All Rights Reserved 14 of 27 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au 2.2.6 Choose equipment or resources to perform a first-hand investigation to gather firsthand data to draw transverse and longitudinal sections of phloem and xylem tissue 3.1.1 Explain why the concentration of water in cells should be maintained within a narrow range for optimal function There are 4 main reasons 1. Living cells are known to work best in an isotonic environment, in which the concentration of solutes in the internal and external environment of the cell is the same. If the concentration of solutes in the internal or external environment changes, cells may take in or lose water through osmosis. This may lead to death through plasmolysis or cytolysis 2. Water also has a high heat capacity allowing it to absorb or lose large amounts of heats without a significant change in temperature. Maintenance of a constant body temperature is essential for many organisms and this can only be achieved through the maintenance of adequate amounts of water. 3. Enzymes require a range of specific conditions for their optimum functioning, some of which is related to the concentration of water and solutes in the internal and external environment. Thus a change in concentration of water in cells could interfere with teh functioning of enzymes 4. All chemical reactions in the body occur in an aqueous medium, thus the main role of water is to provide a medium for bodily reactions 3.1.2 Explain why the removal of wastes is essential for continued metabolic activity Metabolism produces a number of waste products in living organisms such as CO2, excess salts and nitrogenous wastes An accumulation of wastes can be toxic to the body or can disrupt metabolic activity E.g. An excess of carbon dioxide can increase pH, which affects enzyme activity This is why they need to be removed, or converted into a less toxic form such as when amino acids are broken down (deamination), a nitrogenous waste called ammonia is produced which must be removed or changed into a less toxic form 3.1.3 Identify the role of the kidney in the excretory system of fish and mammals © (2012) All Rights Reserved www.hscintheholidays.com.au 15 of 27 For more info, go to Primary roles of kidneys are regulation of salt/water concentrations in the body (osmoregulation), and removal of nitrogenous wastes Kidneys also filter the blood, excrete hormones and vitamins, maintain a correct balance of salts by excreting those in excess, help to maintain pH of the blood, and reabsorb nutrients that are needed In fish, kidneys maintain constant concentration of internal fluid for the cells In mammals, excretion of urea, and regulation of internal salt/water concentrations, occurs in the kidney 3.1.4 Explain why the processes of diffusion and osmosis are inadequate in removing dissolved nitrogenous wastes in some organisms Diffusion and osmosis are both examples of passive transport, relying on random movements of molecules. Diffusion is too slow for the normal functioning of the body and is not able to selectively reabsorb useful solutes. Osmosis only deals with the movement of water and thus would only allow water to move out of the body, not the nitrogenous wastes. In the kidney, some useful products are reabsorbed into the body – this would not be possible with diffusion (active transport needed) Osmosis without active reabsorption of water would result in excess water loss The kidney functions by using excreting all the blood substances in the nephron ‘outside’ the body and then selectively (actively) reabsorbing useful materials 3.1.5 Distinguish between active and passive transport and relate these to processes occurring in the mammalian kidney Passive transport does not require expenditure of energy (e.g. diffusion, osmosis), as materials move down a concentration gradient Facilitated diffusion: specific carrier protein molecule assists diffusion Occurs in filtration, and in osmosis of water back into the blood Proximal tubule: K+ and HCO3- ions out, ammonia (NH3) in Thin section of ascending limb of loop of Henle: NaCl out Osmosis of water out in tubules, descending limb of loop of Henle, and collecting duct Active transport requires expenditure on the part of the organism, and often goes against concentration gradient Specific carrier proteins in membrane may bind with substance and carry it across the membrane Endocytosis: a pouch forms that carries matter through the membrane © (2012) All Rights Reserved 16 of 27 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au Enables cells to maintain stable internal conditions in spite of extreme variation in the external environment Occurs in secretion of substances into the nephrons, reabsorption of nutrients back into the blood, and selective reabsorption of salts required by the body Proximal tubule: glucose/amino acids out, H+ in Distal tubule: HCO3- out, K+ and H+ in Na+ out in tubules, thick segment of ascending limb of loop of Henle, and collecting duct Poisons and drugs secreted in proximal and distal tubules 3.1.6 Explain how the processes of filtration and reabsorption in the mammalian nephron regulate body fluid composition Each kidney is made up of about one million small filtering units called nephrons, which produce urine It is a regulatory unit which absorbs and secretes substances to maintain fluid concentration and as a result maintain homeostasis A nephron is a long twisted tubule made of a number of sections: a Bowman’s capsule, connected to a proximal tubule, leading to the loop of Henle, which connects to the distal tubule. This all joins to the collecting duct which leads to the bladder. Nephrons are surrounded by dense network of capillaries (providing a large surface area for reabsorption) Starting point is Bowman’s capsule, situated in the cortex Leads to a narrow, convoluted tube, which makes a loop in the medulla back to the cortex, then joins a collecting duct Collecting duct transports urine to pelvis of kidney, which leads to the ureters 3 processes in formation of urine: filtration, reabsorption, secretion Filtration Blood brought to kidneys by renal artery, which divides into smaller vessels Vessels form a network of capillaries called a glomerulus, when they reach Bowman’s capsule The structure of the glomerulus means that it acts as an ultrafilter Very high blood pressure in glomerulus, as well as very permeable capillary walls, non-selectively force some parts of blood through Bowman’s capsule into the kidney tubule to become ‘glomerular filtrate’ Glomerular filtrate consists of blood plasma, and small soluble molecules which pass through by passive filtration; no blood cells, platelets or large plasma proteins © (2012) All Rights Reserved www.hscintheholidays.com.au 17 of 27 For more info, go to Water, nitrogenous wastes (urea), food materials (glucose, amino acids, vitamins), other ions (e.g. bicarbonate), other ingested substances (penicillin), and hormones Filtrate forced into proximal part of tubules nephron’s tubules Along length of tubule, composition of filtrate adjusted until it contains only unwanted substances (urine) Reabsorption As filtrate travels down the tubule, materials the body can re-use are selectively reabsorbed into the large capillary network surrounding the tubules Glucose, amino acids, vitamins, bicarbonate, and water reabsorbed through microvilli on tubule walls Reabsorption of ions occurs at different rates depending on feedback from body Occurs in proximal/distal parts of tubule, and in loop of Henle Glucose, amino acids reabsorbed in proximal tubule Sodium/potassium ions reabsorbed in proximal/distal tubules; chlorine ions and water follow passively into the blood Bicarbonate ions reabsorbed in proximal/distal tubules to maintain blood pH Secretion Selective process by which body actively transports substances from blood into nephrons Hydrogen ions secreted in proximal/distal tubules to regulate blood pH Drugs (e.g. penicillin) and poisons identified by liver are actively secreted into proximal tubule Regulation of Body Fluid Composition: Recap Proximal tubule Nutrients such as glucose and amino acids reabsorbed Salts reabsorbed, and water follows by osmosis Hydrogen ions and drugs/poisons secreted Loop of Henle © (2012) All Rights Reserved 18 of 27 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au Descending part: walls permeable to water but not to salt Water passes by out by osmosis, until filtrate is isotonic with external medulla Ascending part: walls permeable to salt but not to water Salt (NaCl) passes out passively across thin-walled section as external solute concentration decreases, and then actively across thick-walled section *Salt passing out makes interstitial fluid of medulla quite concentrated Distal tubule Salts reabsorbed, and water follows by osmosis Bicarbonate reabsorbed, hydrogen ions secreted Collecting Duct Walls permeable to water but not salt, so water passes out by osmosis 3.1.7 Outline the role of the hormones, aldosterone and ADH (anti-diuretic hormone) in the regulation of water and salt levels in blood 2 hormones maintain salt and water levels in the blood: Anti-diuretic hormone (ADH) and Aldosterone. Anti-Diuretic Hormone 1. ADH is made by the hypothalamus but it is stored in the pituitary gland. 2. It is able to regulate the reabsorption of water by varying the permeability of the collecting tubule and the distil tubules. 3. Receptors in the hypothalamus monitor the concentration of the blood: 4. If the salt concentrations in the blood are too HIGH then the receptors in the hypothalamus detect this and secrete higher levels of ADH through the pituitary gland. 5. This increases the permeability of the collecting tubule allowing more water to be reabsorbed back into the blood and as a result, lowering salt concentrations and concentration of urine. 6. When salt concentrations are LOW in the blood less ADH is secreted decreasing the permeability of the collecting tubule, allowing less water to be absorbed into the blood stream. Concentration of urine. Aldosterone Aldosterone is produced by the adrenal glands and regulates the level of salt in the blood by varying its absorption in the nephron. Aldosterone increases permeability of walls of distal tubules to Na + ions; Clions follow by diffusion Pressure-sensitive receptors in the kidney detect fall in blood pressure (LOW SALT LEVELS) , levels of aldosterone increase. This results in more salts being reabsorbed into the blood stream from the nephron. However water also moves out of the nephron due to the process of osmosis. The result is that Na+ levels, blood volume and pressure increase helping to maintain constant filtration of the blood at the glomerulus When HIGH SALT LEVELS are detected, levels of aldosterone decrease and subsequently the amount of salt and water reabsorbed decreases as well. IMPORTANT: ADH is relevant to salt levels, controlled via water retention. But ADH only affects the concentration of salts and never their actual levels © (2012) All Rights Reserved www.hscintheholidays.com.au 19 of 27 For more info, go to 3.1.8 Define enantiostasis as the maintenance of metabolic and physiological functions in response to variations in the environment and discuss its importance to estuarine organisms in maintaining appropriate salt concentrations Enantiostasis is the maintenance of metabolic and physiological functions in response to variations in the environment • An area where the freshwater from the river meets the saltwater of the sea is called an estuary • From low tide to high tide, water can flow in either the salty ocean (high salt water levels) or from freshwater rivers (low salt water concentration) – this causes great variation in the levels of salt in the water • As a result estuarine organisms such as fish, invertebrates, mangroves carry out enantiostasis to maintain suitable internal salt concentration • Estuarine fish who maintain an internal solute concentration similar to the external concentration are known as osmoconformers and do this by moving small nonessential organic molecules like amino acids in and out of their tissues, depending on their external environment (salt concentration). E.g. Fiddler Crab • They do this to ensure the osmotic pressure is the same in the internal and external environment, minimising any water movement associated with changing salt concentrations • Stenohaline organisms that remain in the open sea can tolerate little or no change in the salinity of their environment • Euryhaline can tolerate a wide range of salinities: Such organisms are osmoconformers (must be able to function with fluctuating internal salt concentrations) or osmoregulators (must have physiological mechanisms to control salt concentration of their bodies) Most marine invertebrates are osmoconformers. In contrast, marine mammals and most fish are osmoregulators, maintaining homeostasis regardless of the osmotic pressure of the environment 3.1.9 Describe adaptations of a range of terrestrial Australian plants that assist in minimising water loss Xerophytes is the general term for plants adapted to living arid or dry conditions. Many Australian terrestrial plants show a number of adaptations to conserve and minimise water loss • Many xerophytes have: Deep tap root systems to reach underground water, and wide, shallow roots to soak up surface moisture Thick cuticle – stops uncontrolled evapouration through leaf cells Small surface area – less surface area for evapouration Low stomata density – smaller surface area for diffusion Sunken stomata, stomatal hairs, rolled leaves – maintaining gumid air around stomata Examples • The Mulga has branches arranged so that any rain falling is directly channelled into the roots • Eucalyptus trees are hard with waxy cuticles reducing the amount of water loss through transpiration. They also have leaves which hang vertically for minimal sun exposure • Acacia Pycnantha has phyllodes (a leaf stalk that has been modified to carry out the major role of photosynthesis without having the density of stomatas • © (2012) All Rights Reserved 20 of 27 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au • • Spinifex Grass has extensive root systems that can reach underground water. Their leaves are long and thin to reduce water loss and roll up to hide stomates whereby preventing water loss Porcupine Grass – high humidity is maintained around stomates openings, reducing the effect of wind on water loss 3.2.1 Perform a first-hand investigation of the structure of a mammalian kidney by dissection, use of a model or visual resource and identify the regions involved in the excretion of waste products • • • • Renal capsule: thin layer of cells that surrounds each kidney Ureter: transports urine away from the kidney Glomeruli give cortex its granulated appearance Loops of Henle give the medulla its striated appearance 3.2.2 Gather, process and analyse information from secondary sources to compare the process of renal dialysis with the function of the kidney Renal dialysis is an artificial process in which wastes in blood are removed by diffusion across a semi permeable membrane Used for people who have impaired kidney function, where products of metabolism (including urea) build up in the body. High concentrations of these cause tiredness etc. The level of creatinine in the blood is often a measure of the degree of kidney failure. There are 2 main types of renal dialysis: Haemodialysis © (2012) All Rights Reserved www.hscintheholidays.com.au 21 of 27 For more info, go to Blood is drawn from an artery, and passes through dialysis tubing made of semipermeable material • Tubing passes through a container of dialysing fluid (balanced salt solution) • Membrane allows wastes to diffuse across into dialysis solution, but not blood cells, platelets or proteins Excess water is also removed by osmosis This step is similar to filtration stage of normal kidney function • Any salt or drug that is in a higher concentration in the dialysing fluid than in the blood, will diffuse into the blood This step is similar to the passive transport components of reabsorption • Dialysing fluid is constantly replaced to maintain concentration gradients and ensure maximum waste removal • Anti-clotting agent heparin is added to the cleaned blood, and the blood is returned to the body • Haemodialysis can be used only 4-5 hours at a time, 3 times a week Because heparin is dangerous, risk of infection, and blood cells may be damaged as they pass through plastic tubes Peritoneal dialysis • Unlike haemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis undertaken inside the body • Dialysis solution introduced into peritoneal (abdominal) cavity through a catheter • Natural membrane lining peritoneal cavity is a partially permeable membrane, so waste products and excess water from body can pass through membrane into dialysis solution Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) • Sterile dialysis fluid is introduced into abdomen through a catheter, and fluid ‘dwells’ in the cavity until the next change • At the end of the dialysing period, used fluid is allowed to run out into an empty drainage bag Automated peritoneal dialysis (APD) • Person connects via a catheter to a cycler machine to perform overnight dialysis Comparison Kidney © (2012) All Rights Reserved 22 of 27 Dialysis For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au 1. Type of membrane 2. Where filtration occurs 3. Products Removed 4. Products not removed (similarity) 5. Type of transport 6.Where diffused blood is returned 7. Anti clotting agent 8. Frequency Permeable membrane which varies with hormone Glomerulus Fluid component of blood. E.g. urea, amino acids, salts and water Red and white blood cells, proteins, platelets, large molecules Active and passive transport occurs throughout the nephron Via the tubule No Continuous Partly permeable plastic membrane Blood taken from the patients artery is passed through the partly permeable plastic tubing in the dialysis machine Waste products Red and white blood cells, proteins, platelets, large molecules Passive Via the dialysis tub to a vein in the arm Yes, Heparin 3-5 hrs 5 times a week 3.2.3 Present information to outline the general use of hormone replacement therapy in people who cannot secrete aldosterone • • • • • • • • • • • • • Causes of low aldosterone levels Diseases of adrenal glands or pituitary glands, surgery on adrenals, medications that prevent thrombosis Hypoaldosteronism is a condition where people fail to secrete aldosterone. Addison's disease is a disease with these symptoms Inability to secrete aldosterone from adrenal cortex, caused by shrinking/destruction of adrenal gland Effect of low aldosterone levels due to Addison’s disease Excessive amounts of sodium are excreted with high urine output Results in dehydration, low sodium levels, high potassium levels, high acid levels, and lowered blood pressure/volume, which can lead to heart failure Symptoms: fatigue, muscle weakness, weight loss, skin changes Treated with hormone replacement therapy using a synthetic hormone called fludrocortisone (Florinef) It is taken as a once a day pill and is highly successful in treating those with Addison’s disease Careful monitoring needed to avoid fluid retention and high blood pressure Patients advised to increase salt intake 3.2.4 Analyse information from secondary sources to compare and explain the differences in urine concentration of terrestrial mammals, marine fish and freshwater fish • • Significant amounts of water are reabsorbed through the loop of Henle, resulting in hypertonic urine production Animals without loops of Henle in their kidney tubules produce a hypotonic urine ______________________ Freshwater Fish © (2012) All Rights Reserved www.hscintheholidays.com.au 23 of 27 For more info, go to Excrete large amounts of dilute (hypotonic) urine, to lose water • Problem: Water tends to diffuse into body and ions tend to diffuse out, so fish needs to remove water, and keep salts Kidneys produce copious amounts of dilute urine to remove water Kidneys actively reabsorb salts (NaCl) to prevent salt loss Freshwater fish rarely drink water • Maintain higher concentration of solutes in their body (hypertonic to their surroundings) • Ammonia is excreted in large volumes of dilute urine, and across the gills Saltwater Fish Excrete small amounts of isotonic urine, to remove salt while limiting water loss • Problem: Water tends to diffuse out of their body and ions tend to diffuse into body, so fish needs to retain water Excrete small amount of isotonic urine to retain water and excrete salt Kidneys and gills actively excrete salts (MgSO4) Constantly drink saltwater to replace water losses • Internal body fluids are less concentrated than surroundings (hypotonic to their surroundings) • Ammonia is excreted via the gills *Marine cartilaginous fish (sharks and rays) have tissues isotonic to seawater, so avoid osmoregulation problems Terrestrial Mammals Excrete small amounts of concentrated (hypertonic) urine. Those in dry or desert environments excrete very small amounts of highly concentrated urine to retain as much water as possible • Problem: conserving water while excreting nitrogenous wastes • Deamination: Excess amino acids are broken down to urea in the liver Removing amino group (-NH2) to form urea, and converting the rest to a carbohydrate Kidneys remove urea from the blood, and excrete urea with the urine • Urine leaves kidneys via ureters, and is stored in the bladder until urination Reptiles (the goanna) Excrete semi-solid uric acid • When goanna is dehydrated, number of active tubules in kidney is reduced, reducing amount of filtrate produced and conserving water • As water taken in increases, the number of tubules activated also increases © (2012) All Rights Reserved 24 of 27 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au 3.2.5 Use available evidence to explain the relationship between the conservation of water and the production and excretion of concentrated nitrogenous wastes in a range of Australian insects and terrestrial mammals Animals excrete nitrogenous wastes in different forms because they have different amounts of water available to them. Ammonia Highly soluble in water and highly toxic It must be diluted in large quantities of water and quickly excreted along with the water Least amount of energy required as it does not have to be converted to a less toxic form first. Hence, it is the waste product of most aquatic animals Urea Moderately soluble and moderately toxic Can be safely stored in the body for longer in a more concentration solution. Therefore urea requires less water to remove than ammonia Hence, it is the waste product of mammals, some other terrestrial animals, adult amphibians, sharks, and some bony fish Nevertheless, excreting urea is the major source of water loss in mammals Uric acid Least soluble (highly insoluble) and low toxicity Can be safely stored in the body for extended periods of time, so little water is expended to remove it Hence, it is the waste product of birds, many reptiles, and insects, which need to conserve water Organism Spinifex hopping mouse Red kangaroo Waste product(s) Urea, in a concentrated form Urea, in concentrated urine Insects (e.g. ‘Lord Howe Island Stick Insect’) uric acid • • Explanation Lives in a very arid environment. Drinks very little water and excretes urea in a concentrated form, so that water can be conserved. Has a very efficient excretory system that recycles nitrogen and urea to make a very concentrated urine. This allows them to survive in very arid environments Covered with a cuticle impervious to water. Conserve water by producing a dry paste of uric acid. Australian terrestrial mammals that live in predominantly arid areas, such as the Bilby, must produce very concentrated urine and tolerate high levels of urea in their systems. Some insects excrete ammonia as a vapour across the body surface rather than as a solution of urine, an adaptation for conserving water. © (2012) All Rights Reserved www.hscintheholidays.com.au 25 of 27 For more info, go to • Insects have Malipighian Tubules which collect water and uric acid from the haemolymph and empty it into the gut. Useful substances and water are reabsorbed by the intestines and wastes leave the body from the anus 3.2.6 Process and analyse information from secondary sources and use available evidence to discuss processes used by different plants for salt regulation in saline environments • • Halophytes are plants adapted to living in salty conditions 3 main mechanisms are used by such plants to control salt levels: Salt Exclusion Salt Excretion Salt Accumulation Salt Excluders • They are plants that prevent the entry of salt into their root systems by filtration • It is a passive process and relies on the transpiration stream • The Grey Mangrove (Avicennia Marina) can exclude 95% of salt via the filtration systems in the roots and lower stems • Other plants employ this mechanism are the Red Mangrove and Orange Mangrove Salt Excretor • Have special salt glands, usually in the leaves • Salt is concentrated here and then actively secreted from the plant • The salt can often be seen as salt crystals on the leaves and from here the rain can wash them off. • E.g. Grey and River Mangrove Salt Accumulator • Concentrate or accumulate salt in a part of the plant, usually the bark or older leaves which are then shed • The Milky Mangrove sheds old leaves full of salt 3.2.7 Perform a first-hand investigation to gather information about structures in plants that assist in the conservation of water Method 1: • Looked at Acacia pycnantha plant • Phyllodes instead of leaves to reduce water loss through transpiration • Looked at an eucalyptus leaf • Thick waxy cuticle Water drop on the leaf surface stays together Reflective leaf surface Woody petiole Leaf orientation on the tree Method 2: 1) 4 measuring cylinders were filled with water to the top graduation, and some paraffin oil added to each, to form a visible surface layer 2) One plant was placed into the first measuring cylinder, with leaves protruding from the top. 3) Similarly, the lower epidermis of the 2nd plant was smeared with petroleum jelly, and then placed in the 2nd measuring cylinder. The upper epidermis of © (2012) All Rights Reserved 26 of 27 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au the 3rd plant was smeared with petroleum jelly, and both sides of the 4th plant were smeared with petroleum jelly. 4) The measuring cylinders with plants were weighed. 5) After 24 hours, they were reweighed, and any difference in weights recorded. Results: • Untreated (control) plant had most water loss, followed by upper epidermis covered, lower epidermis covered, and both sides covered. • This suggests that plants lose water through their stomates, and that leaves have more stomates on their underside. This is because stomates on the underside of a leaf are less exposed to the sun than stomates on the upper epidermis, so having stomates on the underside of a leaf minimises water loss by evaporation. © (2012) All Rights Reserved www.hscintheholidays.com.au 27 of 27 For more info, go to 9.2 Maintaining a Balance Contextual Outline Multicellular organisms have specialised organ systems that are adapted for the uptake and transport of essential nutrients from the environment, the utilisation or production of energy and the removal of waste products arising from cellular activities. The basis of healthy body-functioning in all organisms is the health of their cells. The physical and chemical factors of the environment surrounding these cells must remain within narrow limits for cells to survive. These narrow limits need to be maintained and any deviation from these limits must be quickly corrected. A breakdown in the maintenance of this balance causes problems for the organism. The nervous and endocrine systems in animals and the hormone system in plants bring about the coordinated functioning of these organ systems. They are able to monitor and provide the feedback necessary to maintain a constant internal environment. Enzyme action is a prime example of the need for this balance. Enzymes control all of the chemical reactions that constitute the body’s metabolism. As enzymes normally function only within a narrow temperature range, even small rises in body temperature can result in failure of many of the reactions of metabolism that are essential to life. This module increases students understanding of the applications and uses of biology, implications for society and the environment and current issues, research and developments in biology. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 1 of 37 9.2 – Maintaining a Balance: 1. Most organisms are active within a limited temperature range: Identify the composition role and use of a enzymes simple in metabolism, model to describe describe their their chemical specificity in substrates: – Metabolism is the sum total of all chemical reactions occurring within a living organism. The only reason you grow, heal etc is because of this. It is divided into two parts: Anabolic: are reactions that involve the building up of larger organic compounds from simple molecules, eg large polysaccharide molecule such as starch being made from monosaccharide units such as glucose (product of photosynthesis). Catabolic: are reactions that involve the breaking down of complex organic compounds to simple ones, eg digestion of food, large food molecules such as proteins are broken down into small amino acids, which can be used for other uses. – All the above, ie every metabolic reaction in your body is carried out by enzymes, they are organic protein catalysts (chemical substance that speed reactions without taking part in it). – Chemical composition of enzymes: Recall: proteins are made of polypeptides which in turn are made of amino acids. All enzymes are made of protein as well as other elements that are known as co-enzymes/co-factors which help specific enzymes function, such as carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen. Enzymes are globular proteins, meaning the polypeptide chains (ie amino acids) are folded into a 3-dimensional globular shape. This shape is what effective gives each enzyme its function, and parts of it are called active sites. The molecule on which an enzyme acts on is called the substrate. – Specificity of enzymes: Enzymes are highly specific in their action; this means that each enzyme acts on one substrate only, this is because the shape of the active site of the enzyme matches the shape of the substrate material. The products are the substances that the substrate(s) become. One substrate can be split, or two substrates can be joined. – Models to explain specificity: There are two current hypothesis: hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 2 of 37 The Lock and Key Model: suggests that the substrate fits exactly into the active site of the enzyme like a key fits into a lock. It assumes that the enzyme had a rigid and unchanging shape. The Induced Fit Model: states that the binding of the substrate to the enzyme ‘induces’ a temporary change in shape of the enzyme. The new shape of the enzyme better accommodates the shape of the substrate and a reaction occurs. Identify the pH as a way of describing the acidity of a substance: – pH is a way of describing the acidity or the alkalinity of a substance, its a measure of the concentration of hydrogen ions per litre of solution, so the more acidic a substance is, the more hydrogen ions, the LOWER the pH. – The pH scale is from 0 to 14: a pH of 7 is neutral (pure water); above 7 is alkaline and below 7 is acidic. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 3 of 37 Identify data sources, plan, choose equipment or resources and perform a first-hand investigation to test the effect of increased temperature, change in pH and change in substrate concentrations on the activity of enzymes: – Aim: To test the variety of factors (such as temperature, pH (acidity/alkalinity), substrate concentrations) on the effect on enzyme activity. – Equipment: Potato pieces/living tissue (ie cow liver pieces) (both contain the enzyme catalyse) Catalyse is a enzyme that breaks poisonous hydrogen peroxide into harmless water and oxygen gas 20 test-tubes Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) Acid: H2SO4, Base: NaOH Source of heat (ie hot plate) pH probe Thermometer – Safety: Hydrogen peroxide is an extremely poisonous substance, it must not be ingested, and teacher supervision is needed. Hot plate can reach temperatures well over 200-400 degrees, it must be put in a rigid and safe position. Gloves and glasses must be worn, in case of accidental test-tube damage. – Method: 3 separate tests were carried out in test tubes with potatoes placed in them; pH, temperature, substrate concentration. Evidence for enzyme activity came from the sound of 'fizzing effect', the louder the more activity is presumed. This is further determined by the 'formation of bubbles', where bubbles that are in greater in height show greater activity. – Result: – pH: Each enzymes work best at its optimum pH, which is usually within a very narrow range, for example enzymes in the stomach can work at 1-2 pH , whilst enzymes as catalase work at 7 pH. Extremes of acidity or alkalinity can affect the bonds holding the 3D globular shape of the enzyme. Thus losing activity and distorted. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 4 of 37 – Temperature: As temperature increases, MOST enzyme activity increases, up to the optimum temperature (a particular temperature, approx. 40°C, an enzyme is most active). This is because the enzyme and substrate molecules move faster as (more kinetic energy) and therefore more collisions between enzyme and substrate occur. At very high temperatures, the activity of the enzyme falls rapidly, because the heat energy breaks the bonds that cause the protein to fold, so destroying the active site in a irreversible process, called denaturation. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 5 of 37 – Substrate concentration: An increase in substrate concentration will increase the reaction until all enzyme active sites are occupied this is known as saturation point, thus reaction proceeds at maximum rate (VMax or Maximum velocity). A further increase in substrate, cannot increase the rate because the are no active sites available. Explain why the maintenance of a constant internal environment is important for optimal metabolic efficiency: – Metabolism is severally affected by enzymes, and hence the functioning of an organism. Enzymes work best within a limited range of environmental conditions, but their efficiency is affected greatly by certain factors which include temperature, pH and substrate concentration. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 6 of 37 – Hence a constant and stable internal environment is needed so that enzymes will always be working at an optimum rate, and thus metabolism will be a optimum efficiency, if these factors do not remain relatively stable then the rate of enzyme-catalysed reactions decrease, this rate could affect an entire metabolic pathway. Describe homeostasis as the process by which organisms maintain a relatively stable internal environment: – Homeostasis is the process by which organisms maintain a relatively stable (constant) or almost constant, internal environment. – Homeostasis falls into 2 categories, depending if it is exothermic (doesn't produce own heat) or endothermic (produce own heat). An organism may be a conformer or a regulator. Regulators try to maintain the parameter at a constant level over possibly wide environmental variations. Conformers allow the environment to determine the parameter. Explain that homeostasis consists of two stages – – Detecting changes from the stable state; – Counteracting changes from the stable state: Homeostasis in endotherms is carried out in 2 steps, this mechanism is known as feedback: Detecting change. Counteracting the change. – Detecting Changes: Any change that provokes a response is a stimulus. Receptors detect stimuli. Examples of external stimuli: light, day length, sound, temperature, odours. Examples of internal stimuli: levels of CO2, oxygen levels, water, wastes. – Receptors can range from a patch of sensitive cells, to complex organs like the eyes and ears of mammals. Counteracting Changes: After receptors detect changes, organisms can then react to the change. This type of response will counteract the change to ensure the stable state is maintained. Effectors bring about responses to stimuli. Effectors can either be muscles or glands: Muscles bring about change by movement Glands bring about change by secreting chemical substances Gather, process and analyse information from secondary sources and use available evidence to develop a model of a feedback mechanism: – The mechanism that brings about homeostatic change is called FEEDBACK – Homeostasis does not maintain the exact set point, but homeostasis is maintained as long as there is only a narrow range of fluctuation (increase and decrease) of the variable around the set point. If the fluctuation is large (this is the most common in humans), and exceeds the normal range, a negative feedback mechanism comes into operation in response to this change; it is termed negative because it counteracts (negates) the change, thus returning the body to within the normal range. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 7 of 37 – In living organisms, the feedback system has 3 main parts: Receptors: a type of sensor that constantly monitors the internal environment Control Centre: receives info from the receptors and determines the response Effector: Restores the set value. Keeps environments stable. – An example of a feedback system would be the control of carbon dioxide levels (an increase in it): Outline the role of the nervous system in detecting and responding to environmental changes: – The nervous system is an organ system containing a network of specialized cells called neurons that coordinate the actions of an animal and transmit signals between different parts of its body. – The nervous system works to regulate and maintain an animal’s internal environment and respond to the external environment, ie maintain homeostasis. – The nervous system is made up of two parts: hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 8 of 37 Central Nervous System: This acts as a CONTROL CENTRE for all the body’s responses and it coordinates all these responses, it consists of the brain (specifically hypothalamus) and the spinal chord where it receives information, interprets it and initiates a response. Peripheral Nervous System: This is a branching system of nerves that connects receptors and effectors. This system transmits messages from the central nervous system and back. It acts as a communication channel. Identify the broad range over which life is found compared with the narrow limits for individual species: – Ambient temperature literally means the temperature of the environment; room temperature implies a temperature inside a temperature-controlled building (the building has specific parts which affect the ambient temp). – Organisms on Earth life in environments with ambient temperatures ranging from less than 0ºC (such as arctic animals) to more than 100ºC (such bacteria found in boiling undersea volcano vents). – However, individual organisms cannot survive this entire range of temperatures for example mammals can only survive temperatures from about 0 - 45ºC. – This means that life is found in a very wide range of temperatures, but individual species can only be found in a narrow temperature range. Compare responses of named Australian ectothermic and endothermic organisms to changes in the ambient temperature and explain how these responses assist in temperature regulation: Analyse information from secondary sources to describe adaptations and responses that have occurred in Australian organisms to assist temperature regulation: – Ectotherms (cold blooded): are organisms that have a limited ability to control their body temperature (due to their cellular activities generate little heat). Their body temperatures rise and fall with ambient temperature changes. – Most organisms are ectotherms; examples are plants, all invertebrates, fish, amphibians and reptiles. Endotherms (warm blooded): are organisms whose metabolism generates enough heat to maintain an internal temperature independent of the ambient temperature. – Examples are birds and mammals. Ectothermic response; Central netted dragon (Ctenophorus nuchalis): Increase in temperature (ie hotter): Stays in sheltered areas to avoid extreme heat. They can dig burrows or seek shelter in caves or crevices. This reduces the effect of heat on their body. It can change into nocturnal animal when the temperature becomes very hot. Many desert animals sleep in burrows during the day and are active at night, to escape the heat. Decrease in temperature (ie colder): It will change its body position, to expose more of its body surface area to sun's rays, increasing core body temperature. They will seek areas of higher heat rays, such as on top of ledges instead of burrows. – Endothermic response; Red Kangaroo (Macropus rufus): hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 9 of 37 Increase in temperature (ie hotter): It licks its arms to cool itself. The evaporation of the saliva cools its skin by convection. It becomes less active, activity generates heat as many reactions are exothermic (release heat). Decrease in temperature (ie colder): Insulation: they have a thick fur layer, and contract their muscles controlling and shiver to generate heat. They seek group warming, where they are exposed to less cold air. Identify some responses of plants to temperature change: – Since plants cannot move from environment to environment, they respond to temperature by various changes: – Increase in temperature (ie hotter): Leaf orientation: Some plants can change the orientation of their leaves in relation to the sun at different times, for example their leaves hang down vertically, to reduce exposure, thus controlling temperature. Growth rates: They alter their growth rate for example; some Eucalyptus trees grow more in spring than in winter, hence using less water which can be use for cooling itself. – Decrease in temperature (ie colder): Deciduous trees (trees that shed their leaves for a part of every year) lose their leaves in winter (leaf fall) and undergo a period of dormancy, which allows them to survive not only the extremely low temperatures, but also water shortages and lower availability of sunlight. Plants may die above the ground, but leave bulbs, roots, rhizomes or tubers to survive underground. These then sprout when favourable conditions return. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 10 of 37 2. Plants and animals transport dissolved nutrients and gases in a fluid medium: Perform a first-hand investigation using the light microscope and prepared slides to gather information to estimate the size of red and white blood cells and draw scaled diagrams of each: – Aim: To estimate the size of red blood cells and white blood cells seen with a light microscope. – Equipment: Light microscope Prepared slides of human blood 1mm sized Mini-grid plastic paper Pencil and drawing paper – Safety: Slides can have sharp or unseen flint pieces of glass, gloves and glasses should be worn. Use commercially prepared microscope slides of blood and not fresh blood, to eliminate the risk of contracting blood-borne disease. – Method: The microscope on normal view ie 1X, has a limited field of view of 16mm. Hence set your microscope with the millimetre-squared graph paper first. Then 'click' the 1X objective lense, this will show you what the 'normal' eye of 16mm can see. Then click the 10X objective, this will magnify the 10mm by a factor of 10. Hence now youll see a maximum field of view of 1.6mm, and its sub-ten components. (also note 1mm= 1000µm) Now using the 40X objective, this now makes the initial 16mm diameter four times less then the 10X, so the diameter is approximately 0.4mm. Hence this diameter is 0.4mm, or 400µm hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 11 of 37 Now, putting a slide of a prepared blood, at 40X objective, estimate how many blood cells there exists in that 'field of view', approximately 50 red blood cells exist, hence the size of 1 RBC is 400 µm divided by 50 (400/50), which is 8 µm. Now for white blood cells since there are so few of them, it is NOT possible to count the number of white cells across the diameter, and even much more difficult to estimate how many would fit across the diameter. Hence there size is estimated by proportion in comparison to that of RBC. – Result: Red blood cells (Erythrocytes): Size: 6-9 µm Shape: Bi-concave (concave on both side) discs Function: Transport of oxygen. They have no nuclei; they only live for 3 months. After this they are destroyed in the liver or spleen. 5-6 million in every millilitre of blood. They are produced in the bone marrow White blood cells (Leucocytes): Size: 12-15 µm Shape: Irregular shape; can change shape Function: To defend against disease Only 4-12 thousand per millilitre of blood They have nuclei, unlike red blood cells They are produced in the lymph glands. Identify the forms in which each of the following is carried in mammalian blood: – Carbon Dioxide hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 12 of 37 – – Oxygen – Water – Salts – Lipids – Nitrogenous wastes – Other products of digestion Carbon dioxide: It is produced as a waste product of respiration in body cells. As its concentration is higher in the cell than in the blood its diffuses in the blood: 70% of the carbon dioxide is converted into carbonic acid then changed into hydrogen carbonate ions. This change from carbon dioxide to carbonate ions happens on the red blood cells. The ions are transported in the plasma, NOT dissolved in it. Carbon + Water Dioxide CO2 + Carbonic Acid H2O Hydrogen + Ions H2CO3 Hydrogen Carbonate Ions H+ + HCO- Bind to haemoglobin in erythrocytes forming carbaminohaemoglobin (only 23% of the carbon dioxide). Be dissolved directly in the plasma (only 7% of the carbon dioxide). – Oxygen: Oxygen is needed in the body for respiration. It is brought in across the respiratory surfaces of the lungs. It binds with haemoglobin in red blood cells, forming oxyhaemoglobin. – Water: Water is the solvent of plasma; it makes up the bulk of blood volume. It makes up 60% of the volume of blood. – Salts: These are transported directly dissolved in the plasma as ions (ie NaCl as Na+ and Cl-), these are known as electrolytes. – Lipids and other products of digestion: The aim of digestion is to break large molecules down to a size small enough for absorption through the intestine wall and into the bloodstream, so that they can be transported to cells in the body where they are required. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 13 of 37 Lipids are any of a group of organic compounds (ie containing carbon), including the fats, oils, waxes, sterols, and triglycerides that are insoluble in water, are oily to the touch, and together with carbohydrates and proteins constitute the principal structural material of living cells. Digested lipids are changed into triglycerides (this happens in the lining of the small intestine). Lipids are then transported as chylomicrons (these are clusters of triglycerides, phospholipids and cholesterol), wrapped in a coat of protein. These are released into the lymph and eventually pass into the veins – Other products: Nitrogenous wastes: Wastes such as ammonia are changed in urea Urea is transported dissolved in the plasma Minute minerals: Includes amino acids, sugars and vitamins They are mainly water soluble and transported in the plasma. Explain the adaptive advantage of haemoglobin: – Haemoglobin is a protein made up of four polypeptide chains (called globins) and each is bonded to a haem (iron-containing) group which can attach to an O molecule, forming oxyhaemoglobin. – For every haemoglobin, 4 oxygen molecules can attach. There about 250 million molecules of haemoglobin in each red blood cell, hence the very high oxygen carrying capacity. – If blood carried oxygen without haemoglobin, the oxygen would have to be dissolved directly into the plasma (into water). But oxygen is not very soluble in water therefore, if oxygen was carried only by being dissolved in blood plasma, 100 ml of water would only be able to carry 0.2 ml of oxygen. – The presence of haemoglobin increases the oxygen carrying capacity of blood by 100 times Dissolved only Haemoglobin – 0.2 ml O2/ 100 ml blood 20 ml O2/ 100 ml blood The adaptive advantage: It increases the oxygen carrying capacity of blood (proven above). Mammalian cells need a lot of energy and therefore must have a continual supply of OXYGEN for RESPIRATION; this ability of blood to carry large quantities of oxygen gives mammals a considerable survival advantage. The extra energy allows mammals to be active, as well as grow large. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 14 of 37 It has the ability to bind oxygen at an increasing rate once the first oxygen molecule binds to it. The bonding of each oxygen molecule causes the haemoglobin to change slightly in shape, making it easier for every subsequent oxygen molecule to bind to it. This increases the rate and efficiency of oxygen uptake. As a result, a very small increase in the oxygen concentration in the lungs can result in a large increase in the oxygen saturation in the blood. It has the capacity to release oxygen at an increasing rate when carbon dioxide is present. Metabolising cells release carbon dioxide, which combines to form acidic carbonic acid, and this lower pH, thus increases chances to affect enzymes, and toxicoses cells (acid is corrosive). It can undergo the Bohr effect, which at lower pH (due to increasing CO2) levels can release oxygen to tissue areas that in need of it. Outline the need for oxygen in living cells and explain why the removal of carbon dioxide from cells is essential: – Cells require oxygen in the process of respiration: – Glucose + oxygen carbon dioxide + water + energy (in the form of ATP). Carbon dioxide is a waste product and must be removed to maintain the normal pH balance of the blood. By removing excess carbon dioxide, it prevents a build up of carbonic acid, which causes the lowering of the pH, and therefore increasing breathing rate and depth. Carbonic acid forms when carbon dioxide dissolves in water. At normal levels, the carbon dioxide; bicarbonate ion (HCO3-) equilibrium is an important mechanism for buffering the blood to maintain a constant pH, if greater amounts of carbon dioxide are produced the body cells (blood and lymph) will become acidic, enzymes can only function within a specific pH range, therefore an increase in carbon dioxide will result in lowering the pH which will affect the overall metabolism of the body. Perform a first-hand investigation to demonstrate the effect of dissolved carbon dioxide on the pH of water: – Aim: To model the effect of carbon dioxide on the pH of water. – Equipment: 25ml of Distilled water in 100mL beaker Universal indictor (its an indicator that changes colour depending on the pH of a solution) pH probe attached to data logger – Safety: Gloves and glasses should be worn, in case of glass breaking. The water can become corrosive due to increasing pH, it should NOT be ingested after use, dispose in an organic waste container. – Straws should NOT be used by more then one student, to minimise contracting diseases. Method: hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 15 of 37 In a beaker, pour water till the 25mL grade mark, then put 3 drops of universal indicator, this should now change into greenish colour. Then put the pH probe, and check the pH is about 7. Exhale air into the straw that is dipped into the solution, for about 3 minutes. – Result: After about 30 seconds, the colour of the solution began to change into pale yellow, and the pH on the data logger started decreasing. This is because carbon dioxide forms a weak acid; carbonic acid (H2CO3) so the water becomes more acidic. Carbonic acid in water dissociates to form hydrogen carbonate ions (HCO3-), and some carbonate ions (CO32-). Analyse information from secondary sources to identify current technologies that allow measurement of oxygen saturation and carbon dioxide concentrations in blood and describe and explain the conditions under which these technologies are used: Technology Pulse oximeter How it Works The Conditions It Is Used Measures O2 levels ONLY. Used in many conditions; this is because it is Device like a peg sits on the finger and painless, easy to apply and quick to give results, measures the transmission of light through example: tissues ie measures the amount of oxygen in arterial blood. anaesthesia. There is a large difference between red light absorbed by haemoglobin compared to oxyhaemoglobin, hence this can be analysed gas (ABG) analysis Measures pressure (or the concentration) of O2 and CO2 in the Used when there are signs of dangerously low oxygen or high carbon dioxide levels. blood hscintheholidays.com.au Can be used as a general check-up procedure to analyse O2 levels Measures O2 and CO2 levels. Monitor premature babies that are in neo-natal wards. to give a reading. Arterial blood During surgeries, to monitor patients under Helpful for monitoring patients under anaesthesia, in intensive care, in accident or All Rights Reserved. Page 16 of 37 emergency facilities and for premature babies. Measures saturation of oxygen (which is the amount of oxygen combined to haemoglobin compared to the maximum) Helps for diagnosing as well as monitoring patients eg a patient in a coma can have their blood gases regularly monitored. Measures levels of bicarbonate and pH (to show CO2 levels) This analysis evaluates how effectively the lungs are delivering oxygen and removing carbon dioxide. Compare the structure of arteries, capillaries and veins in relation to their function: Arteries Veins Structure Thick walled, elastic, muscular Thinner walls then arteries, elastic, less muscle , wider diameter (larger lumen) Direction of blood: flow / pressure Carry blood away from heart, pressure created by hearts pumping puts stress on arteries, blood pressure is high Contain muscle fibres which contract and relax, rate is maintained as blood travels in spurts towards body tissues Oxygenated blood taken away from heart Carry blood to heart, as there is no stress on veins the blood pressure is low Diagram Blood movement and rate Carries hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Contain no muscle, rely on valves and when large muscle contract they help push the blood flow through the veins Deoxygenated blood taken to the heart Page 17 of 37 – Capillaries: Capillaries are an extension of the inner layers of the arteries and veins (Artery arterioles capillary venules veins). Capillaries are only one cell thick, and are so narrow, that only one red blood cell can pass at a time. Capillaries surround all tissue cells, thus they provide a very large surface area over which exchange of materials between blood and body cells can occur. Describe the main changes in the composition of the blood as it moves around the body and identify tissues in which these changes occur: – Pulmonary circuit (From Body to HEART to the Lungs): Blood enters the right atrium of the heart via the vena cava (major vein): The blood is deoxygenated, and high in carbon dioxide. It is also low in glucose and other nutrients; high in urea, other nitrogenous wastes and various poisons. As the heart beats, the right ventricle pumps the blood through the pulmonary artery, to the lungs: Here the blood gains oxygen through exchange with alveoli in the lungs (ie air sacs), and loses its carbon dioxide. The blood then enters the left atrium via the pulmonary vein. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 18 of 37 – Systemic circuit (From Lungs to HEART to the Body): The left ventricle pumps oxygenated blood to the body through the aorta. In the body, various changes occur to the blood. The blood loses oxygen and gains carbon dioxide in all body cells, as respiration occurs. In the Liver: Levels of glucose are regulated: excess glucose is changed to glycogen, or glycogen stores are changed to glucose (if needed). Excess amino acids are changed to ammonia, and then to urea. Poisons are also reduced, as the liver changes them to less toxic forms. In the Intestines: Levels of nutrients from digestion increase. Glucose, amino acids, ions, lipids and other substances from food enter the blood. In the Kidneys: Salt and water levels are regulated. All urea is removed, toxins are excreted into the urine. The changed blood, again highly deoxygenated, from the body then flows back to the pulmonary circuit. Analyse information from secondary sources to identify the products extracted from donated blood and discuss the uses of these products: – Red blood cells: Used to increase the amount of oxygen that can be carried to the body’s tissues; given to anaemic patients, or people whose bone marrow do not make enough red blood cells – Plasma: This liquid portion of the blood, is given to people with clotting disorders (such as haemophilia), and also used to adjust the osmotic pressure of the blood (to pull fluids out of tissues). – White blood cells: Infection fighting component of the blood. Analyse and present information from secondary sources to report progress in the production of artificial blood and use available evidence to propose reasons why such research is needed: – The problems of using real blood: Shortage of real blood It has to be ‘cross-matched’. This is because, if you receive the wrong type of blood, it can be fatal. This is a great disadvantage in emergency situations. It has to be free of infectious agents. Only blood that is free of bacteria and infectious agents (such as HIV) can be used. Testing the blood is costly. It has a short shelf-life. Because red blood cells only survive for 3 months, the blood has a short life span (blood can only survive for 3-4 weeks). – Proposed replacement; Perflurochemicals (perflurocarbons): hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 19 of 37 Synthetic and inert, are completely sterile Cheap to produce, compared to using real blood. Can dissolve 5 times more oxygen than blood. Free of biological materials, therefore no risk of infections BUT; must be combined with other materials to mix in with the bloodstream (eg lecithin). Choose equipment gather first-hand or resources data to to draw perform transverse a first-hand and investigation longitudinal sections to of phloem and xylem tissue: – Aim: To draw the transverse (top view) and longitudinal section (side view) of plant tissue (ie xylem and phloem). – Equipment: A stick of celery Red food colouring Water in a 100mL beaker Razor blade Light microscope – Safety: The razor blade is extremely sharp, gloves should be worn incase of accidental flicking of blade onto skin. Glasses should be worn incase of glass breaking. – Method: In the 100mL beaker filled with water, put 3-5 drops of red food colouring into the solution. It should change to dilute red colour. Place the celery stick into the beaker, and leave it over night, so the coloured water can seep into the plant sections to rise through xylem vessels, hence staining them strongly. Some water also travelled down the phloem vessels. Using a sharp one-sided razor blade, very thin slices were cut from across the stalk (for the transverse section) and from the length of the stalk (for the longitudinal section). – Suitable slices were then prepared as wet mounts and viewed under a light microscope. Result: hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 20 of 37 Phloem: hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 21 of 37 Xylem: Describe current theories about processes responsible for the movement of materials through plants in xylem and phloem tissue: – There are 2 types of transport tissues in plants: Xylem: This transports water and mineral ions upwards from the roots to the leaves of a plant. Phloem: This transports organic materials (particularly sugars) up and down the stem to other parts of the plant. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 22 of 37 – There exist two theories (ie possible explanations based on evidence) into how water/nutrient moves in each tissue respectively. In Xylem: The transpiration stream theory (ie cohesion-adhesion-tension theory) possists that due to physical forces of water (and ions) being removed from the plant stomates by passive transport (ie transpiration), causes a column of water to be sucked up into the stem by the evaporative pull, also the low concentration of water at the roots allows more water to diffuse in. Once water has been absorbed into the roots of plants (by osmosis) along with mineral ions (by diffusion and active transport), these substances move across the root into the xylem. A small amount of root pressure results from the continual influx of more water and ions, hence forcing the solution already present upwards (due to pressure build up), however this is usually not enough. The constant loss of water, leads to a transpiration stream (which is the constant upward flow of water through a plant), this is because of waters 2 properties, which are adhesive forces (the ability of molecules to attach to walls), and cohesive forces (the attraction of molecules to each other), hence leading to the capillarity (water rising up through bore of tissue) and hence the stream. In Phloem: The pressure flow theory (ie source-path-sink theory) states that in the plants, there are sources of nutrients, e.g. leaf cells are the sources of sucrose. As the sucrose, amino acids and other minerals build up, the cells actively transport the glucose sugars by active transport into the phloem tubes, this is known as loading, it can be done by 2 ways: Symplastic Loading: Sugars and nutrients move in the phloem from the mesophyll cells to the sieve elements through the plasmodesmata that join adjacent cells (note: Plasmodesmata have not been found in all plants). hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 23 of 37 Apoplastic Loading: sugar and nutrients move along the cell walls to the sieve plate. Then they cross the cell membrane by active transport to enter the phloem tube. As sugars enter the phloem the concentration of phloem sap increases, this causes the entry of water by osmosis from the surrounding cells (osmotic pressure gradient is low). This resulting pressure causes water and dissolved solutes to flow towards a SINK. A sink is a region of the plant where sugars and other nutrients are actively begin removed from the phloem. As sugars move out of the phloem, water flows out with them. This reduces the pressure in the sieve cells at the sink region. Materials are transported both up and down the stem and are distributed especially to the growing points and reproductive structures, including developing fruits and seeds, it is driven by a gradient generated osmotically. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 24 of 37 3. Plants and animals regulate the concentration of gases, water and waste products of metabolism in cells and in interstitial fluid: Explain why the concentration of water in cells should be maintained within a narrow range for optimal function: – Water makes up around 70-90% of living things; it is essential for life, it is the solvent of all metabolic reactions in living cells (universal solvent), and sometimes directly takes part in it (eg. respiration). Therefore a deviation can cause: Isotonic: Concentration of solutes outside the cell is the same as inside the cell. No overall movement of water. Hypertonic: Concentration of solutes is greater outside the cell than inside. Water tends to move out of the cell. Hypotonic: Concentration of solutes is greater inside the cell than out. Water tends to move inside the cell. – Living cells work best in an isotonic environment where the levels of water in cells need to be kept relatively constant, any change in the concentration of solutes will result in a change in the levels of water in cells which usually results in death (either dehydration or cell bursting) – Enzymes also require specific conditions of functioning, some of which could relate to the levels of water and solutes in cells, as an increase in water changes the concentration of acid (either dilutes it or makes it concentrated). Explain why the removal of wastes is essential for continued metabolic activity: – As a result of metabolism, many waste products are formed, for example: In the process of deamination (process by which amino acids and proteins are broken down into ammonia), ammonia is highly toxic and must be removed or changed to a less toxic form. It can greatly increase the pH and make it more alkaline. – It carbon dioxide acculmates, it can form carbonic acid, which lowers the pH. If these toxins are allowed to accumulate, they would slow down metabolism and kill the cells (e.g. excess toxins is acidic thus increases pH, affection enzyme function which can lead to denaturation), this is why they need to quickly be removed, or converted into a less toxic form. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 25 of 37 Identify the role of the kidney in the excretory system of fish and mammals: – The maintenance of a constant concentration of nutrients, water and waste products in the internal environment of organism, is crucial to its wellbeing. The concentration of these substances directly affects metabolism in cells, and hence needs to be balanced. – Many wastes are excreted (process by which waste products, which have been produced as a result of metabolism, are removed from the body). The excretory system is made up of systems and organs that carry out the removal of metabolic wastes. Carbon dioxide is excreted via the lungs (ie respiratory system). Nitrogenous wastes are removed along with excess salts and water via the kidneys (ie urinary system). – The kidney is an organ of the excretory system of both fish and mammals. It plays a central role in homeostasis, forming excreting urine while maintaining osmoregulatory. – Osmoregulation: means the physiological processes that an organism uses to maintain water balance; that is, to compensate for water loss, avoid excess water gain, and maintain the proper osmotic concentration (osmolarity) of the body fluids. Distinguish between active and passive transport and relate these to processes occurring in the mammalian kidney: Explain how the processes of filtration and reabsorption in the mammalian nephron regulate body fluid composition: – Active transport: is the process of using energy to transport substances across highly concentrated membrane from an area of low concentration, it would normally not be able to cross due to a concentration gradient (the amount of substance in a particular area). – Passive transport: is the process of movement substances across a membrane from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration without energy expenditure (this is diffusion and osmosis). – The excretory system is a group of organs that function together remove metabolic wastes from the tissues of an organism and expel them to the outside, a kidney is the main excretory organ responsible for removing nitrogenous wastes from the bodies of vertebrate animals (including fish and humans). – The function of the kidney in excretion is to filter the blood that enters it, removing the waste in the blood solution, for this waste to be excreted. This filtration is carried out by millions of small filtering units that are in kidneys which are known as nephrons. The nephron is a regulatory unit; it absorbs or secretes substances in order to maintain homeostasis, this regulation maintains the constant composition of body fluids which is done by adjusting salts and water levels to maintain fluid concentration, different ions also adjusted to maintain pH. – Urine is the final solution produced by these microscopic tubules, and passes out the kidney via ducts (ureters) and then goes to the urine storage organ (bladder), which after a certain limit fills and the human passes this urine hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 26 of 37 through the urethra to the outside. (In vertebrates this goes to the a chamber (cloaca) instead of the urethra, which empties to the outside) – Detailed structure of a nephron: It consists of 4 parts (in order of movement) THAT are heavily surrounded by capillaries: Bowmans capsule Proximal (ie first) convoluted tubule the loop of Henle Distal (ie second) convoluted tubule collecting duct which produces urine that leads to the bladder. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 27 of 37 – Function of nephrons Three main process occur in the kidney, in the parts mentioned above, they are filteration reabsorption secretion. Filtration: When highly oxygenated, unfiltered blood enters the kidney through the renal artery it goes to the nephrons, upon reaching it splits into a spherical network of blood capillaries called glomerulus that are in a Bowman's capsule, the blood pressure here is so high that fluid and substance from the blood are forced into the Bowman’s capsule, and forms a fluid called the glomerular filtrate. Blood cells and proteins are retained in the blood, while large volumes of water pass through contained dissolved substances such as: water, amino acids, glucose, salts (ions), nitrogenous wastes and other toxic molecules. This process is known as filtration, it separates based on SIZE of molecules, since proteins and RBC are larger then other molecules they cannot pass the Bowmans capsule. Therefore: Substances that the body needs will require reabsorption, so they are not lost with urine. Additional wastes that were in the bloodstream, and managed to escape the higher pressure of the Bowmans capsule need to be added to this 'urine' mixture. Hence this is not the final fluid excretion. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 28 of 37 Reabsorption: Depending on the feedback of the body, varying amounts of solutes are reabsorbed from the solution, for example water, amino acids, glucose, salts (Na+, K+, Cl-, Ca2+, Mg2+, HCO3-). This occurs in the proximal, loop of Henle and distal tubules. In the proximal tube: All organic nutrients (amino acids and glucose) are reabsorbed, aswell as some ions such as (Na+, K+, Cl-, Ca2+, Mg2+, HCO3-). In the loop of Henle: After the initial reabsorption from the distil tube, you'll have a liquid that is primarily urine, whether its concentrated or not, is dependent in the loop of Henle. The loop of Henle has 2 limbs, a descending then ascending, where the descending is permeable to water ONLY, and the descending is permeable to salt ONLY. Secretion: This is the last process and leads to the formation of urine. It occurs in the distil and collecting tubule. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 29 of 37 The liquid present in the tubule, are then added with metabolic wastes (such as urea, ammonia, hydrogen ions, durgs: pencillin, morphine) etc that are brought by active transport to the distil tubule. Explain why the processes of diffusion and osmosis are inadequate in removing dissolved nitrogenous wastes in some organisms: – Diffusion and osmosis are both examples of passive transport (ie they do not require energy), this is too slow for the normal functioning, because the movement of molecules relies on differences in the concentration gradient between two solutions (it moves from high conc. to low conc.) – Also this process greatly slows down once the difference in concentration gradient becomes smaller, and stops once the concentrations are at equilibrium. – Further problems with: Diffusion: Toxins such as drugs can accumulate in the body, and can only be removed if they are in water, hence they would ONLY move if there was a higher concentration of toxins in the blood then the urine itself. And this would stop if the concentrations equalise. Osmosis: Too much water is lost in urine: If there is a high concentration of urine, water will continually be drawn from the body to even out the conc. gradient. However, excretion of dilute urine means the loss of large amount of water from body, a loss to great for terrestrial animals. Osmosis only deals with the movement of water and thus would only allow water to move out of the body, not the nitrogenous wastes. Perform a first-hand investigation of the structure of a mammalian kidney by dissection, use a model or visual resource and identify the regions of the mammalian kidney involved in the excretion of waste products: – Aim: To identify the regions of the mammalian kidney, notably the ones involved in the excretion of waste products. – Equipment: One commercially packed cow (mammalian) kidney One sharp medical cutting scalpel Dissecting tray Clean 'laying' paper Latex gloves Tissue forceps (they are things that help pull skin) Disinfecting agent – Safety: Gloves and protective face masks are crucial, incase of a diseased kidney, or the possible contracting of a disease between touching. Gloves are also crucial in handling of sharp object, incase of accidental damage. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 30 of 37 Disinfecting agent was used on the tray, and the paper, incase of airborne particles that may be ingested and cause allergies or disease. – Material was carefully disposed, to inhibit the build up of bacteria and other organisms. Method: Carefully layer brush the tray with agent, and paper, and place them together. Place the kidney facing sideways, and carefully cut sideways to obtain a 'longitudinal' cut (ie sideway cut), using forceps to open the skin. – Result: The kidney is made up of 3 sections, the pelvis, the medulla and the cortex, the obvious observable sections where located, and an imaginary "large" nephron was placed, to observe where the 3 mains process (ie filteration reabsorption secretion) occur. Cortex: Contains the glomeruli. It is very dark red due to the capillaries It is involved in the filtration of blood. Medulla: Contains the nephron tubules, as can be observed by the striped appearance of the medulla It is involved in the reabsorption and secretion of substances Pelvis: It is where all the collecting ducts connect to, ie the collecting of urine. Gather, process and analyse information from secondary sources to compare the process of renal dialysis with the function of the kidney: hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 31 of 37 – People with disfunctional kidneys are not able to remove wastes such as urea, they have to undergo renal dialysis to regulate their blood. – Renal dialysis is an artificial process in which waste in the blood are removed by diffusion across a partially permeable membrane of solution known as dialysis fluid. It is a solution of salts, glucose, dissolved gases and other substances (it has an equivalent composition to interstitial fluid), wastes (particular urea and excess salts), diffuse out of the blood into the dialysis fluid. The clean blood is then returned. – The process: The blood is extracted from the body from a artery (as it has come from the heart with oxygen, and going to body to pass its waste and regulate levels etc, but it cant as kidney has failed hence blood from artery is used) and passed into a dialyser, which is is a medical unit which is a bundle of hollow fibres made of partially permeable membrane to help units suffering from artery failure. The dialyser is in a solution of dialysing fluid, which has similar concentrations of substances as blood. The dialyser only allows wastes to pass through, and not blood cells and proteins (in this way it is similar to the filtrations stage of the nephron). – The wastes diffuse into the solution, and it is constantly replaced The anti-clotting agent, heparin, is also added to prevent clotting. The blood is then returned to the body via a vein. Comparison of dialysis and normal kidney function: Kidneys - Continuous process; very efficient Renal Dialysis - Slow process; occurs a few times a week for patients hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 32 of 37 - Active and passive transport is used throughout - Only passive transport is used - Useful substances are not reabsorbed as they the nephron - Useful substances are reabsorbed actively by the kidney - diffuse into blood from dialysing fluid Uses a series of membranes (nephrons) which - are selectively permeable. Outline the role of Also uses membranes (but artificial) which are selectively permeable. the hormones, aldosterone and ADH (anti-diuretic hormone) in the regulation of water and salt levels in blood: – Recall: Dehydration is defined as an excessive loss of body fluid. Blood volume is the volume of blood (both red blood cells and plasma) in a person's circulatory system. Blood volume is determined by the amount of water and sodium ingested, excreted by the kidneys into the urine. – A hormone is a chemical released by one or more cells that affects cells in other parts of the organism. It is essentially a chemical messenger that transports a signal from one cell to another, only a small amount of hormone is required to alter cell metabolism. All multicellular organisms produce hormones however animals usually produce hormones which are often transported in the blood. – The kidneys maintain constant conditions within the body by excreting wastes such as urea and by regulating the amounts of water and salts that are reabsorbed. This aspect of homeostasis is mainly due to the actions of two hormones: aldosterone and antidiuretic hormone (ADH): – ADH (Anti-Diuretic Hormone): Also called vasopressin, anti-diuretic hormone literally means (anti-'water losing'), diuretic are heavily used in pro-bodybuilding shows to lose water. It controls the reabsorption of water, this is done by adjusting the permeability of the collecting ducts and the distal tubules. Hence a release of it (ie increase levels), increases (sucks) water out from the tubules, hence the urine becomes more concentrated (as less water is present). It is made in the hypothalamus in the brain, but stored in the pituitary gland. Receptors in the hypothalamus monitor the concentration of the blood: High Salt Concentration: ADH levels increased, collecting ducts and distal tubules become more permeable to water, more water reabsorbed, concentration returns to normal. (Concentrated urine) Low Salt Concentration: ADH levels reduced, collecting ducts and distal tubules less permeable to water, less water absorbed, concentration returns to stable state. (Dilute urine) hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 33 of 37 ADH does not control the levels of salt in the blood. It only controls the concentration of salt through water retention. – Aldosterone: Is a hormone that increases the reabsorption of sodium and the release (secretion) of potassium in the kidneys. Hence a release of it (ie increase levels), causes more salts to be sucked out of the tubules. Aldosterone is produced by the outer-section of the adrenal cortex in the adrenal gland, (which sits above the kidney) and acts on the distal tubules and collecting ducts of the kidney. When there is a lack of absorption of salts (ex. NaCl, NH3, K+ etc) , a signal goes to the hypothalamus which triggers the secretion of aldosterone. High Salt Concentration: Aldosterone levels decreased, less salt reabsorbed, hence less water diffusing into body cells. Low Salt Concentration: Aldosterone levels increased, more salt reabsorbed, more water diffusing into body cells. Present information to outline the general use of hormone replacement therapy in people who cannot secrete aldosterone: – This is a second developed technology, where the first was renal dialysis to aid people with affected kidneys. – Addison’s disease is a rare endocrine disorder occurring when the adrenal glands, seated above the kidney, fail to produce enough aldosterone. Without aldosterone, the body would not be able to reabsorb salt (specifically sodium ions) this would cause severe dehydration and excessive potassium loss which may cause brain damage and death. – The artificial replacement hormone is called Fludrocortisone, a drug that decreases the amount of salt the body excretes. It is taken either orally or intravenously, patients are also advised by their doctors to increase their salt intake. Define enantiostasis as the maintenance of metabolic and physiological functions in response to variations in the environment and discuss its importance to estuarine organisms in maintaining appropriate salt concentrations: – Homeostasis is the process by which organisms maintain a relatively stable (constant) or almost constant, internal environment. – Enantiostasis is the maintenance of metabolic and physiological functions in response to variations in the environment. – The difference between the two, is the fact that homeostasis requires only a SPECIFIC internal condition for an organism to function properly, example 37o is the required temperature for humans to function, enantiostasis is for a VARIETY of internal condition which the function can function properly at, for example diving birds rely on enantiostasis to function properly at extremely high and low pressure sky levels. – In homeostasis heat is 'acted against' by sweating etc, the pressure for birds isn't 'acted against'; it is 'adapted' to. An estuary is where a freshwater river meets and mixes with saltwater sea, and as such the salinity levels are always changing dramatically. This is determined by the tide of the sea: hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 34 of 37 At high tide: sea water flows into the river mouth, creating an environment with higher salt concentration, hence this salt water has the tendency to draw water out cells by osmosis (as the organism will be in freshwater) At low tide: sea water flows out of the river mouth, and freshwater from the estuary is abundant, hence by diffusion organism face the challenge of water moving into their tissue. – Organisms living in such an environment need to have mechanisms to cope with such changes in order to survive, this is collectively called enantiostasis. – Enantiostasis is carried out by 2 process (these are present in normal homestasis conditions too, but they carry out different roles): Osmoconformation: process by which organisms tolerate the changes in the environment, and conform, or alter the concentration of their internal solutes to match the external environment. Their metabolism can handle it. Osmoregulation: is the control of the levels of water and mineral salts in the blood. Process and analyse information from secondary sources and use available evidence to discuss processes used by different plants for salt regulation in saline environments: – Salt, even in small concentrations, has a damaging effect on cell metabolism. – Halophytes are plants that adapted and can tolerate high salt levelled environments, they are commonly found in areas such as estuaries. Grey Mangroves (Avicennia marina): – Salt Prevention: In its roots, it has a layer of cells that actively restrict the movement of salt into xylem vessels. Salt Exclusion: Special glands in the mangroves can actively exclude the salt from the water, so that the water absorbed has a lower salt concentration than the water in the environment. Salt Accumulation: Salt is accumulated in old leaves that drop off, so that the salt is out of the plant’s system Salt Excretion: Salt can be excreted from the underside of the leaves of the mangrove plants; salt crystals form under the leaves. Describe adaptations of a range of terrestrial Australian plants that assist in minimising water loss: Perform a first-hand investigation to gather information about structures in plants that assist in the conservation of water: – Aim: To gather information from plant specimens about structures that assist in the conservation of water. – Equipment: Different type of leafs that exist around the school (typical environment) Hand lens – Safety: Sun has strong UV light outside, sunscreen and hats should be worn. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 35 of 37 – Leaf can be diseased and can have splinters and can be sharp, gloves should be worn. Method: Carefully, leaves where looked at for different 'prominent' features that could inhibit water loss, these where then cross-checked with reliable sources. – Result: Banksia: Leaves have sunken stomates: this reduces transpiration. Hard, waxy cuticles: this reduces the amount of water loss through transpiration. Eucalyptus trees: Hard, waxy cuticles: this reduces the amount of water loss through transpiration. Leaves hang vertically: reduce sun exposure. Spinifex grass: Have extensive root systems that can reach underground water. Leaves are also long and thin: to reduce water loss by transpiration. Can roll up to hide their stomata's: this reduces the amount of water loss through transpiration. Analyse information from secondary sources to compare and explain the differences in urine concentration of terrestrial mammals, marine fish and freshwater fish: – Freshwater Fish: Osmotic Problem: Hypotonic to environment. Water diffuses INTO their bodies. Salts diffuses out. Role of Kidney: Doesn’t drink continually, Kidneys removes excess water, while reabsorbing salts. Urine: Large, dilute amount. – Marine Fish: Osmotic Problem: Hypertonic to environment. Water diffuses OUT of their bodies. Salt diffuses in. Role of Kidney: Continually drinks water, Kidneys reabsorb water, while actively secreting salts. (Salt is also excreted across gills) – Urine: Small, concentrated amount. Terrestrial Mammals: Osmotic Problem: Water needs to be conserved. Role of Kidney: Regulates concentration of blood, while at the same time excretes urea and conserves water. Urine: Concentration changes with the availability of water, as well as temperature and water loss through sweat. Water levels in blood rise, urine amount rises, and concentration decreases and vice versa. Explain the relationship between the conservation of water and the production and excretion of concentrated nitrogenous wastes in a range of Australian insects and terrestrial animals: – Ammonia is the direct result of amino acid breakdown (deamination) and is a waste product of all organisms. It is very water soluble, but VERY toxic, and must be removed quickly, or changed to a less toxic form. – The removal of ammonia would require large volumes of water, and this is not possible for animals or insects that seek to conserve water. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 36 of 37 Aquatic Animals and Fish: These organisms directly release AMMONIA into the environment. This uses a lot of water, but they have no need to conserve it. Ammonia is very water soluble and is excreted through the gills. Terrestrial Animals: Releasing ammonia would be impossible due to lack of water. Instead, land-dwellers change ammonia into less toxic forms and release it periodically. Mammals change it into UREA and release it as urine (ex; kangaroos, wallabies, hopping mice and koalas). Australian animals release very concentrated urine, and are able to tolerate high levels of urea in their bodies. Birds: Birds change ammonia into URIC ACID, a whitish paste which uses hardly any water. This is lighter than using urea, and helps in flight. Insects: Insects also change ammonia to URIC ACID. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 37 of 37 9.2 Maintaining a Balance Contextual Outline Multicellular organisms have specialised organ systems that are adapted for the uptake and transport of essential nutrients from the environment, the utilisation or production of energy and the removal of waste products arising from cellular activities. The basis of healthy body-functioning in all organisms is the health of their cells. The physical and chemical factors of the environment surrounding these cells must remain within narrow limits for cells to survive. These narrow limits need to be maintained and any deviation from these limits must be quickly corrected. A breakdown in the maintenance of this balance causes problems for the organism. The nervous and endocrine systems in animals and the hormone system in plants bring about the coordinated functioning of these organ systems. They are able to monitor and provide the feedback necessary to maintain a constant internal environment. Enzyme action is a prime example of the need for this balance. Enzymes control all of the chemical reactions that constitute the body’s metabolism. As enzymes normally function only within a narrow temperature range, even small rises in body temperature can result in failure of many of the reactions of metabolism that are essential to life. This module increases students understanding of the applications and uses of biology, implications for society and the environment and current issues, research and developments in biology. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 1 of 37 9.2 – Maintaining a Balance: 1. Most organisms are active within a limited temperature range: Identify the composition role and use of a enzymes simple in metabolism, model to describe describe their their chemical specificity in substrates: – Metabolism is the sum total of all chemical reactions occurring within a living organism. The only reason you grow, heal etc is because of this. It is divided into two parts: Anabolic: are reactions that involve the building up of larger organic compounds from simple molecules, eg large polysaccharide molecule such as starch being made from monosaccharide units such as glucose (product of photosynthesis). Catabolic: are reactions that involve the breaking down of complex organic compounds to simple ones, eg digestion of food, large food molecules such as proteins are broken down into small amino acids, which can be used for other uses. – All the above, ie every metabolic reaction in your body is carried out by enzymes, they are organic protein catalysts (chemical substance that speed reactions without taking part in it). – Chemical composition of enzymes: Recall: proteins are made of polypeptides which in turn are made of amino acids. All enzymes are made of protein as well as other elements that are known as co-enzymes/co-factors which help specific enzymes function, such as carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen. Enzymes are globular proteins, meaning the polypeptide chains (ie amino acids) are folded into a 3-dimensional globular shape. This shape is what effective gives each enzyme its function, and parts of it are called active sites. The molecule on which an enzyme acts on is called the substrate. – Specificity of enzymes: Enzymes are highly specific in their action; this means that each enzyme acts on one substrate only, this is because the shape of the active site of the enzyme matches the shape of the substrate material. The products are the substances that the substrate(s) become. One substrate can be split, or two substrates can be joined. – Models to explain specificity: There are two current hypothesis: hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 2 of 37 The Lock and Key Model: suggests that the substrate fits exactly into the active site of the enzyme like a key fits into a lock. It assumes that the enzyme had a rigid and unchanging shape. The Induced Fit Model: states that the binding of the substrate to the enzyme ‘induces’ a temporary change in shape of the enzyme. The new shape of the enzyme better accommodates the shape of the substrate and a reaction occurs. Identify the pH as a way of describing the acidity of a substance: – pH is a way of describing the acidity or the alkalinity of a substance, its a measure of the concentration of hydrogen ions per litre of solution, so the more acidic a substance is, the more hydrogen ions, the LOWER the pH. – The pH scale is from 0 to 14: a pH of 7 is neutral (pure water); above 7 is alkaline and below 7 is acidic. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 3 of 37 Identify data sources, plan, choose equipment or resources and perform a first-hand investigation to test the effect of increased temperature, change in pH and change in substrate concentrations on the activity of enzymes: – Aim: To test the variety of factors (such as temperature, pH (acidity/alkalinity), substrate concentrations) on the effect on enzyme activity. – Equipment: Potato pieces/living tissue (ie cow liver pieces) (both contain the enzyme catalyse) Catalyse is a enzyme that breaks poisonous hydrogen peroxide into harmless water and oxygen gas 20 test-tubes Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) Acid: H2SO4, Base: NaOH Source of heat (ie hot plate) pH probe Thermometer – Safety: Hydrogen peroxide is an extremely poisonous substance, it must not be ingested, and teacher supervision is needed. Hot plate can reach temperatures well over 200-400 degrees, it must be put in a rigid and safe position. Gloves and glasses must be worn, in case of accidental test-tube damage. – Method: 3 separate tests were carried out in test tubes with potatoes placed in them; pH, temperature, substrate concentration. Evidence for enzyme activity came from the sound of 'fizzing effect', the louder the more activity is presumed. This is further determined by the 'formation of bubbles', where bubbles that are in greater in height show greater activity. – Result: – pH: Each enzymes work best at its optimum pH, which is usually within a very narrow range, for example enzymes in the stomach can work at 1-2 pH , whilst enzymes as catalase work at 7 pH. Extremes of acidity or alkalinity can affect the bonds holding the 3D globular shape of the enzyme. Thus losing activity and distorted. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 4 of 37 – Temperature: As temperature increases, MOST enzyme activity increases, up to the optimum temperature (a particular temperature, approx. 40°C, an enzyme is most active). This is because the enzyme and substrate molecules move faster as (more kinetic energy) and therefore more collisions between enzyme and substrate occur. At very high temperatures, the activity of the enzyme falls rapidly, because the heat energy breaks the bonds that cause the protein to fold, so destroying the active site in a irreversible process, called denaturation. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 5 of 37 – Substrate concentration: An increase in substrate concentration will increase the reaction until all enzyme active sites are occupied this is known as saturation point, thus reaction proceeds at maximum rate (VMax or Maximum velocity). A further increase in substrate, cannot increase the rate because the are no active sites available. Explain why the maintenance of a constant internal environment is important for optimal metabolic efficiency: – Metabolism is severally affected by enzymes, and hence the functioning of an organism. Enzymes work best within a limited range of environmental conditions, but their efficiency is affected greatly by certain factors which include temperature, pH and substrate concentration. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 6 of 37 – Hence a constant and stable internal environment is needed so that enzymes will always be working at an optimum rate, and thus metabolism will be a optimum efficiency, if these factors do not remain relatively stable then the rate of enzyme-catalysed reactions decrease, this rate could affect an entire metabolic pathway. Describe homeostasis as the process by which organisms maintain a relatively stable internal environment: – Homeostasis is the process by which organisms maintain a relatively stable (constant) or almost constant, internal environment. – Homeostasis falls into 2 categories, depending if it is exothermic (doesn't produce own heat) or endothermic (produce own heat). An organism may be a conformer or a regulator. Regulators try to maintain the parameter at a constant level over possibly wide environmental variations. Conformers allow the environment to determine the parameter. Explain that homeostasis consists of two stages – – Detecting changes from the stable state; – Counteracting changes from the stable state: Homeostasis in endotherms is carried out in 2 steps, this mechanism is known as feedback: Detecting change. Counteracting the change. – Detecting Changes: Any change that provokes a response is a stimulus. Receptors detect stimuli. Examples of external stimuli: light, day length, sound, temperature, odours. Examples of internal stimuli: levels of CO2, oxygen levels, water, wastes. – Receptors can range from a patch of sensitive cells, to complex organs like the eyes and ears of mammals. Counteracting Changes: After receptors detect changes, organisms can then react to the change. This type of response will counteract the change to ensure the stable state is maintained. Effectors bring about responses to stimuli. Effectors can either be muscles or glands: Muscles bring about change by movement Glands bring about change by secreting chemical substances Gather, process and analyse information from secondary sources and use available evidence to develop a model of a feedback mechanism: – The mechanism that brings about homeostatic change is called FEEDBACK – Homeostasis does not maintain the exact set point, but homeostasis is maintained as long as there is only a narrow range of fluctuation (increase and decrease) of the variable around the set point. If the fluctuation is large (this is the most common in humans), and exceeds the normal range, a negative feedback mechanism comes into operation in response to this change; it is termed negative because it counteracts (negates) the change, thus returning the body to within the normal range. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 7 of 37 – In living organisms, the feedback system has 3 main parts: Receptors: a type of sensor that constantly monitors the internal environment Control Centre: receives info from the receptors and determines the response Effector: Restores the set value. Keeps environments stable. – An example of a feedback system would be the control of carbon dioxide levels (an increase in it): Outline the role of the nervous system in detecting and responding to environmental changes: – The nervous system is an organ system containing a network of specialized cells called neurons that coordinate the actions of an animal and transmit signals between different parts of its body. – The nervous system works to regulate and maintain an animal’s internal environment and respond to the external environment, ie maintain homeostasis. – The nervous system is made up of two parts: hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 8 of 37 Central Nervous System: This acts as a CONTROL CENTRE for all the body’s responses and it coordinates all these responses, it consists of the brain (specifically hypothalamus) and the spinal chord where it receives information, interprets it and initiates a response. Peripheral Nervous System: This is a branching system of nerves that connects receptors and effectors. This system transmits messages from the central nervous system and back. It acts as a communication channel. Identify the broad range over which life is found compared with the narrow limits for individual species: – Ambient temperature literally means the temperature of the environment; room temperature implies a temperature inside a temperature-controlled building (the building has specific parts which affect the ambient temp). – Organisms on Earth life in environments with ambient temperatures ranging from less than 0ºC (such as arctic animals) to more than 100ºC (such bacteria found in boiling undersea volcano vents). – However, individual organisms cannot survive this entire range of temperatures for example mammals can only survive temperatures from about 0 - 45ºC. – This means that life is found in a very wide range of temperatures, but individual species can only be found in a narrow temperature range. Compare responses of named Australian ectothermic and endothermic organisms to changes in the ambient temperature and explain how these responses assist in temperature regulation: Analyse information from secondary sources to describe adaptations and responses that have occurred in Australian organisms to assist temperature regulation: – Ectotherms (cold blooded): are organisms that have a limited ability to control their body temperature (due to their cellular activities generate little heat). Their body temperatures rise and fall with ambient temperature changes. – Most organisms are ectotherms; examples are plants, all invertebrates, fish, amphibians and reptiles. Endotherms (warm blooded): are organisms whose metabolism generates enough heat to maintain an internal temperature independent of the ambient temperature. – Examples are birds and mammals. Ectothermic response; Central netted dragon (Ctenophorus nuchalis): Increase in temperature (ie hotter): Stays in sheltered areas to avoid extreme heat. They can dig burrows or seek shelter in caves or crevices. This reduces the effect of heat on their body. It can change into nocturnal animal when the temperature becomes very hot. Many desert animals sleep in burrows during the day and are active at night, to escape the heat. Decrease in temperature (ie colder): It will change its body position, to expose more of its body surface area to sun's rays, increasing core body temperature. They will seek areas of higher heat rays, such as on top of ledges instead of burrows. – Endothermic response; Red Kangaroo (Macropus rufus): hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 9 of 37 Increase in temperature (ie hotter): It licks its arms to cool itself. The evaporation of the saliva cools its skin by convection. It becomes less active, activity generates heat as many reactions are exothermic (release heat). Decrease in temperature (ie colder): Insulation: they have a thick fur layer, and contract their muscles controlling and shiver to generate heat. They seek group warming, where they are exposed to less cold air. Identify some responses of plants to temperature change: – Since plants cannot move from environment to environment, they respond to temperature by various changes: – Increase in temperature (ie hotter): Leaf orientation: Some plants can change the orientation of their leaves in relation to the sun at different times, for example their leaves hang down vertically, to reduce exposure, thus controlling temperature. Growth rates: They alter their growth rate for example; some Eucalyptus trees grow more in spring than in winter, hence using less water which can be use for cooling itself. – Decrease in temperature (ie colder): Deciduous trees (trees that shed their leaves for a part of every year) lose their leaves in winter (leaf fall) and undergo a period of dormancy, which allows them to survive not only the extremely low temperatures, but also water shortages and lower availability of sunlight. Plants may die above the ground, but leave bulbs, roots, rhizomes or tubers to survive underground. These then sprout when favourable conditions return. 2. Plants and animals transport dissolved nutrients and gases in a fluid medium: Perform a first-hand investigation using the light microscope and prepared slides to gather information to estimate the size of red and white blood cells and draw scaled diagrams of each: – Aim: To estimate the size of red blood cells and white blood cells seen with a light microscope. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 10 of 37 – Equipment: Light microscope Prepared slides of human blood 1mm sized Mini-grid plastic paper Pencil and drawing paper – Safety: Slides can have sharp or unseen flint pieces of glass, gloves and glasses should be worn. Use commercially prepared microscope slides of blood and not fresh blood, to eliminate the risk of contracting blood-borne disease. – Method: The microscope on normal view ie 1X, has a limited field of view of 16mm. Hence set your microscope with the millimetre-squared graph paper first. Then 'click' the 1X objective lense, this will show you what the 'normal' eye of 16mm can see. Then click the 10X objective, this will magnify the 10mm by a factor of 10. Hence now youll see a maximum field of view of 1.6mm, and its sub-ten components. (also note 1mm= 1000µm) Now using the 40X objective, this now makes the initial 16mm diameter four times less then the 10X, so the diameter is approximately 0.4mm. Hence this diameter is 0.4mm, or 400µm Now, putting a slide of a prepared blood, at 40X objective, estimate how many blood cells there exists in that 'field of view', approximately 50 red blood cells exist, hence the size of 1 RBC is 400 µm divided by 50 (400/50), which is 8 µm. Now for white blood cells since there are so few of them, it is NOT possible to count the number of white cells across the diameter, and even much more difficult to estimate how many would fit across the diameter. Hence there size is estimated by proportion in comparison to that of RBC. – Result: hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 11 of 37 Red blood cells (Erythrocytes): Size: 6-9 µm Shape: Bi-concave (concave on both side) discs Function: Transport of oxygen. They have no nuclei; they only live for 3 months. After this they are destroyed in the liver or spleen. 5-6 million in every millilitre of blood. They are produced in the bone marrow White blood cells (Leucocytes): Size: 12-15 µm Shape: Irregular shape; can change shape Function: To defend against disease Only 4-12 thousand per millilitre of blood They have nuclei, unlike red blood cells They are produced in the lymph glands. Identify the forms in which each of the following is carried in mammalian blood: – – Carbon Dioxide – Oxygen – Water – Salts – Lipids – Nitrogenous wastes – Other products of digestion Carbon dioxide: It is produced as a waste product of respiration in body cells. As its concentration is higher in the cell than in the blood its diffuses in the blood: 70% of the carbon dioxide is converted into carbonic acid then changed into hydrogen carbonate ions. This change from carbon dioxide to carbonate ions happens on the red blood cells. The ions are transported in the plasma, NOT dissolved in it. Carbon + Water Dioxide CO2 hscintheholidays.com.au + H2O Carbonic Acid Hydrogen + Ions H2CO3 All Rights Reserved. Hydrogen Carbonate Ions H+ + HCO- Page 12 of 37 Bind to haemoglobin in erythrocytes forming carbaminohaemoglobin (only 23% of the carbon dioxide). Be dissolved directly in the plasma (only 7% of the carbon dioxide). – Oxygen: Oxygen is needed in the body for respiration. It is brought in across the respiratory surfaces of the lungs. It binds with haemoglobin in red blood cells, forming oxyhaemoglobin. – Water: Water is the solvent of plasma; it makes up the bulk of blood volume. It makes up 60% of the volume of blood. – Salts: These are transported directly dissolved in the plasma as ions (ie NaCl as Na+ and Cl-), these are known as electrolytes. – Lipids and other products of digestion: The aim of digestion is to break large molecules down to a size small enough for absorption through the intestine wall and into the bloodstream, so that they can be transported to cells in the body where they are required. Lipids are any of a group of organic compounds (ie containing carbon), including the fats, oils, waxes, sterols, and triglycerides that are insoluble in water, are oily to the touch, and together with carbohydrates and proteins constitute the principal structural material of living cells. Digested lipids are changed into triglycerides (this happens in the lining of the small intestine). Lipids are then transported as chylomicrons (these are clusters of triglycerides, phospholipids and cholesterol), wrapped in a coat of protein. These are released into the lymph and eventually pass into the veins – Other products: Nitrogenous wastes: Wastes such as ammonia are changed in urea Urea is transported dissolved in the plasma Minute minerals: Includes amino acids, sugars and vitamins They are mainly water soluble and transported in the plasma. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 13 of 37 Explain the adaptive advantage of haemoglobin: – Haemoglobin is a protein made up of four polypeptide chains (called globins) and each is bonded to a haem (iron-containing) group which can attach to an O molecule, forming oxyhaemoglobin. – For every haemoglobin, 4 oxygen molecules can attach. There about 250 million molecules of haemoglobin in each red blood cell, hence the very high oxygen carrying capacity. – If blood carried oxygen without haemoglobin, the oxygen would have to be dissolved directly into the plasma (into water). But oxygen is not very soluble in water therefore, if oxygen was carried only by being dissolved in blood plasma, 100 ml of water would only be able to carry 0.2 ml of oxygen. – The presence of haemoglobin increases the oxygen carrying capacity of blood by 100 times Dissolved only Haemoglobin – 0.2 ml O2/ 100 ml blood 20 ml O2/ 100 ml blood The adaptive advantage: It increases the oxygen carrying capacity of blood (proven above). Mammalian cells need a lot of energy and therefore must have a continual supply of OXYGEN for RESPIRATION; this ability of blood to carry large quantities of oxygen gives mammals a considerable survival advantage. The extra energy allows mammals to be active, as well as grow large. It has the ability to bind oxygen at an increasing rate once the first oxygen molecule binds to it. The bonding of each oxygen molecule causes the haemoglobin to change slightly in shape, making it easier for every subsequent oxygen molecule to bind to it. This increases the rate and efficiency of oxygen uptake. As a result, a very small increase in the oxygen concentration in the lungs can result in a large increase in the oxygen saturation in the blood. It has the capacity to release oxygen at an increasing rate when carbon dioxide is present. Metabolising cells release carbon dioxide, which combines to form acidic carbonic acid, and this lower pH, thus increases chances to affect enzymes, and toxicoses cells (acid is corrosive). It can undergo the Bohr effect, which at lower pH (due to increasing CO2) levels can release oxygen to tissue areas that in need of it. Outline the need for oxygen in living cells and explain why the removal of carbon dioxide from cells is essential: – Cells require oxygen in the process of respiration: – Glucose + oxygen carbon dioxide + water + energy (in the form of ATP). Carbon dioxide is a waste product and must be removed to maintain the normal pH balance of the blood. By removing excess carbon dioxide, it prevents a build up of carbonic acid, which causes the lowering of the pH, and therefore increasing breathing rate and depth. Carbonic acid forms when carbon dioxide dissolves in water. At normal levels, the carbon dioxide; bicarbonate ion (HCO3-) equilibrium is an important mechanism for buffering the blood to maintain a constant pH, if greater amounts of carbon dioxide are produced the body cells (blood and lymph) will become acidic, enzymes can only function within a specific pH range, therefore an increase in carbon dioxide will result in lowering the pH which will affect the overall metabolism of the body. Perform a first-hand investigation to demonstrate the effect of dissolved carbon dioxide on the pH of water: hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 14 of 37 – Aim: To model the effect of carbon dioxide on the pH of water. – Equipment: 25ml of Distilled water in 100mL beaker Universal indictor (its an indicator that changes colour depending on the pH of a solution) pH probe attached to data logger – Safety: Gloves and glasses should be worn, in case of glass breaking. The water can become corrosive due to increasing pH, it should NOT be ingested after use, dispose in an organic waste container. – Straws should NOT be used by more then one student, to minimise contracting diseases. Method: In a beaker, pour water till the 25mL grade mark, then put 3 drops of universal indicator, this should now change into greenish colour. Then put the pH probe, and check the pH is about 7. Exhale air into the straw that is dipped into the solution, for about 3 minutes. – Result: After about 30 seconds, the colour of the solution began to change into pale yellow, and the pH on the data logger started decreasing. This is because carbon dioxide forms a weak acid; carbonic acid (H2CO3) so the water becomes more acidic. Carbonic acid in water dissociates to form hydrogen carbonate ions (HCO3-), and some carbonate ions (CO32-). hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 15 of 37 Analyse information from secondary sources to identify current technologies that allow measurement of oxygen saturation and carbon dioxide concentrations in blood and describe and explain the conditions under which these technologies are used: Technology Pulse oximeter How it Works The Conditions It Is Used Measures O2 levels ONLY. Used in many conditions; this is because it is Device like a peg sits on the finger and painless, easy to apply and quick to give results, measures the transmission of light through example: tissues ie measures the amount of oxygen in arterial blood. anaesthesia. There is a large difference between red light absorbed by haemoglobin compared to oxyhaemoglobin, hence this can be analysed gas (ABG) Measures pressure (or the concentration) of O2 and CO2 in the analysis Used when there are signs of dangerously low oxygen or high carbon dioxide levels. Helpful for monitoring patients anaesthesia, in intensive care, in accident or Measures saturation of oxygen (which is emergency facilities and for premature babies. haemoglobin compared to the maximum) Helps for diagnosing as well as monitoring patients eg a patient in a coma can have their blood gases regularly monitored. Measures levels of bicarbonate and pH (to show CO2 levels) This analysis evaluates how effectively the lungs are delivering oxygen and removing carbon dioxide. hscintheholidays.com.au under blood the amount of oxygen combined to Can be used as a general check-up procedure to analyse O2 levels Measures O2 and CO2 levels. Monitor premature babies that are in neo-natal wards. to give a reading. Arterial blood During surgeries, to monitor patients under All Rights Reserved. Page 16 of 37 Compare the structure of arteries, capillaries and veins in relation to their function: Arteries Veins Structure Thick walled, elastic, muscular Thinner walls then arteries, elastic, less muscle , wider diameter (larger lumen) Direction of blood: flow / pressure Carry blood away from heart, pressure created by hearts pumping puts stress on arteries, blood pressure is high Contain muscle fibres which contract and relax, rate is maintained as blood travels in spurts towards body tissues Oxygenated blood taken away from heart Carry blood to heart, as there is no stress on veins the blood pressure is low Diagram Blood movement and rate Carries – Contain no muscle, rely on valves and when large muscle contract they help push the blood flow through the veins Deoxygenated blood taken to the heart Capillaries: Capillaries are an extension of the inner layers of the arteries and veins (Artery arterioles capillary venules veins). Capillaries are only one cell thick, and are so narrow, that only one red blood cell can pass at a time. Capillaries surround all tissue cells, thus they provide a very large surface area over which exchange of materials between blood and body cells can occur. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 17 of 37 Describe the main changes in the composition of the blood as it moves around the body and identify tissues in which these changes occur: – Pulmonary circuit (From Body to HEART to the Lungs): Blood enters the right atrium of the heart via the vena cava (major vein): The blood is deoxygenated, and high in carbon dioxide. It is also low in glucose and other nutrients; high in urea, other nitrogenous wastes and various poisons. As the heart beats, the right ventricle pumps the blood through the pulmonary artery, to the lungs: Here the blood gains oxygen through exchange with alveoli in the lungs (ie air sacs), and loses its carbon dioxide. – The blood then enters the left atrium via the pulmonary vein. Systemic circuit (From Lungs to HEART to the Body): The left ventricle pumps oxygenated blood to the body through the aorta. In the body, various changes occur to the blood. The blood loses oxygen and gains carbon dioxide in all body cells, as respiration occurs. In the Liver: hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 18 of 37 Levels of glucose are regulated: excess glucose is changed to glycogen, or glycogen stores are changed to glucose (if needed). Excess amino acids are changed to ammonia, and then to urea. Poisons are also reduced, as the liver changes them to less toxic forms. In the Intestines: Levels of nutrients from digestion increase. Glucose, amino acids, ions, lipids and other substances from food enter the blood. In the Kidneys: Salt and water levels are regulated. All urea is removed, toxins are excreted into the urine. The changed blood, again highly deoxygenated, from the body then flows back to the pulmonary circuit. Analyse information from secondary sources to identify the products extracted from donated blood and discuss the uses of these products: – Red blood cells: Used to increase the amount of oxygen that can be carried to the body’s tissues; given to anaemic patients, or people whose bone marrow do not make enough red blood cells – Plasma: This liquid portion of the blood, is given to people with clotting disorders (such as haemophilia), and also used to adjust the osmotic pressure of the blood (to pull fluids out of tissues). – White blood cells: Infection fighting component of the blood. Analyse and present information from secondary sources to report progress in the production of artificial blood and use available evidence to propose reasons why such research is needed: – The problems of using real blood: Shortage of real blood It has to be ‘cross-matched’. This is because, if you receive the wrong type of blood, it can be fatal. This is a great disadvantage in emergency situations. It has to be free of infectious agents. Only blood that is free of bacteria and infectious agents (such as HIV) can be used. Testing the blood is costly. It has a short shelf-life. Because red blood cells only survive for 3 months, the blood has a short life span (blood can only survive for 3-4 weeks). – Proposed replacement; Perflurochemicals (perflurocarbons): Synthetic and inert, are completely sterile Cheap to produce, compared to using real blood. Can dissolve 5 times more oxygen than blood. Free of biological materials, therefore no risk of infections BUT; must be combined with other materials to mix in with the bloodstream (eg lecithin). hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 19 of 37 Choose equipment gather first-hand or resources data to to draw perform transverse a first-hand and investigation longitudinal sections to of phloem and xylem tissue: – Aim: To draw the transverse (top view) and longitudinal section (side view) of plant tissue (ie xylem and phloem). – Equipment: A stick of celery Red food colouring Water in a 100mL beaker Razor blade Light microscope – Safety: The razor blade is extremely sharp, gloves should be worn incase of accidental flicking of blade onto skin. Glasses should be worn incase of glass breaking. – Method: In the 100mL beaker filled with water, put 3-5 drops of red food colouring into the solution. It should change to dilute red colour. Place the celery stick into the beaker, and leave it over night, so the coloured water can seep into the plant sections to rise through xylem vessels, hence staining them strongly. Some water also travelled down the phloem vessels. Using a sharp one-sided razor blade, very thin slices were cut from across the stalk (for the transverse section) and from the length of the stalk (for the longitudinal section). Suitable slices were then prepared as wet mounts and viewed under a light microscope. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 20 of 37 – Result: hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 21 of 37 Phloem: Xylem: Describe current theories about processes responsible for the movement of materials through plants in xylem and phloem tissue: – There are 2 types of transport tissues in plants: Xylem: This transports water and mineral ions upwards from the roots to the leaves of a plant. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 22 of 37 – Phloem: This transports organic materials (particularly sugars) up and down the stem to other parts of the plant. There exist two theories (ie possible explanations based on evidence) into how water/nutrient moves in each tissue respectively. In Xylem: The transpiration stream theory (ie cohesion-adhesion-tension theory) possists that due to physical forces of water (and ions) being removed from the plant stomates by passive transport (ie transpiration), causes a column of water to be sucked up into the stem by the evaporative pull, also the low concentration of water at the roots allows more water to diffuse in. Once water has been absorbed into the roots of plants (by osmosis) along with mineral ions (by diffusion and active transport), these substances move across the root into the xylem. A small amount of root pressure results from the continual influx of more water and ions, hence forcing the solution already present upwards (due to pressure build up), however this is usually not enough. The constant loss of water, leads to a transpiration stream (which is the constant upward flow of water through a plant), this is because of waters 2 properties, which are adhesive forces (the ability of molecules to attach to walls), and cohesive forces (the attraction of molecules to each other), hence leading to the capillarity (water rising up through bore of tissue) and hence the stream. In Phloem: The pressure flow theory (ie source-path-sink theory) states that in the plants, there are sources of nutrients, e.g. leaf cells are the sources of sucrose. As the sucrose, amino acids and other minerals build up, the cells actively transport the glucose sugars by active transport into the phloem tubes, this is known as loading, it can be done by 2 ways: Symplastic Loading: Sugars and nutrients move in the phloem from the mesophyll cells to the sieve elements through the plasmodesmata that join adjacent cells (note: Plasmodesmata have not been found in all plants). hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 23 of 37 Apoplastic Loading: sugar and nutrients move along the cell walls to the sieve plate. Then they cross the cell membrane by active transport to enter the phloem tube. As sugars enter the phloem the concentration of phloem sap increases, this causes the entry of water by osmosis from the surrounding cells (osmotic pressure gradient is low). This resulting pressure causes water and dissolved solutes to flow towards a SINK. A sink is a region of the plant where sugars and other nutrients are actively begin removed from the phloem. As sugars move out of the phloem, water flows out with them. This reduces the pressure in the sieve cells at the sink region. Materials are transported both up and down the stem and are distributed especially to the growing points and reproductive structures, including developing fruits and seeds, it is driven by a gradient generated osmotically. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 24 of 37 3. Plants and animals regulate the concentration of gases, water and waste products of metabolism in cells and in interstitial fluid: Explain why the concentration of water in cells should be maintained within a narrow range for optimal function: – Water makes up around 70-90% of living things; it is essential for life, it is the solvent of all metabolic reactions in living cells (universal solvent), and sometimes directly takes part in it (eg. respiration). Therefore a deviation can cause: Isotonic: Concentration of solutes outside the cell is the same as inside the cell. No overall movement of water. Hypertonic: Concentration of solutes is greater outside the cell than inside. Water tends to move out of the cell. Hypotonic: Concentration of solutes is greater inside the cell than out. Water tends to move inside the cell. – Living cells work best in an isotonic environment where the levels of water in cells need to be kept relatively constant, any change in the concentration of solutes will result in a change in the levels of water in cells which usually results in death (either dehydration or cell bursting) – Enzymes also require specific conditions of functioning, some of which could relate to the levels of water and solutes in cells, as an increase in water changes the concentration of acid (either dilutes it or makes it concentrated). Explain why the removal of wastes is essential for continued metabolic activity: – As a result of metabolism, many waste products are formed, for example: In the process of deamination (process by which amino acids and proteins are broken down into ammonia), ammonia is highly toxic and must be removed or changed to a less toxic form. It can greatly increase the pH and make it more alkaline. – It carbon dioxide acculmates, it can form carbonic acid, which lowers the pH. If these toxins are allowed to accumulate, they would slow down metabolism and kill the cells (e.g. excess toxins is acidic thus increases pH, affection enzyme function which can lead to denaturation), this is why they need to quickly be removed, or converted into a less toxic form. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 25 of 37 Identify the role of the kidney in the excretory system of fish and mammals: – The maintenance of a constant concentration of nutrients, water and waste products in the internal environment of organism, is crucial to its wellbeing. The concentration of these substances directly affects metabolism in cells, and hence needs to be balanced. – Many wastes are excreted (process by which waste products, which have been produced as a result of metabolism, are removed from the body). The excretory system is made up of systems and organs that carry out the removal of metabolic wastes. Carbon dioxide is excreted via the lungs (ie respiratory system). Nitrogenous wastes are removed along with excess salts and water via the kidneys (ie urinary system). – The kidney is an organ of the excretory system of both fish and mammals. It plays a central role in homeostasis, forming excreting urine while maintaining osmoregulatory. – Osmoregulation: means the physiological processes that an organism uses to maintain water balance; that is, to compensate for water loss, avoid excess water gain, and maintain the proper osmotic concentration (osmolarity) of the body fluids. Distinguish between active and passive transport and relate these to processes occurring in the mammalian kidney: Explain how the processes of filtration and reabsorption in the mammalian nephron regulate body fluid composition: – Active transport: is the process of using energy to transport substances across highly concentrated membrane from an area of low concentration, it would normally not be able to cross due to a concentration gradient (the amount of substance in a particular area). – Passive transport: is the process of movement substances across a membrane from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration without energy expenditure (this is diffusion and osmosis). – The excretory system is a group of organs that function together remove metabolic wastes from the tissues of an organism and expel them to the outside, a kidney is the main excretory organ responsible for removing nitrogenous wastes from the bodies of vertebrate animals (including fish and humans). – The function of the kidney in excretion is to filter the blood that enters it, removing the waste in the blood solution, for this waste to be excreted. This filtration is carried out by millions of small filtering units that are in kidneys which are known as nephrons. The nephron is a regulatory unit; it absorbs or secretes substances in order to maintain homeostasis, this regulation maintains the constant composition of body fluids which is done by adjusting salts and water levels to maintain fluid concentration, different ions also adjusted to maintain pH. – Urine is the final solution produced by these microscopic tubules, and passes out the kidney via ducts (ureters) and then goes to the urine storage organ (bladder), which after a certain limit fills and the human passes this urine hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 26 of 37 through the urethra to the outside. (In vertebrates this goes to the a chamber (cloaca) instead of the urethra, which empties to the outside) – Detailed structure of a nephron: It consists of 4 parts (in order of movement) THAT are heavily surrounded by capillaries: Bowmans capsule Proximal (ie first) convoluted tubule the loop of Henle Distal (ie second) convoluted tubule collecting duct which produces urine that leads to the bladder. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 27 of 37 – Function of nephrons Three main process occur in the kidney, in the parts mentioned above, they are filteration reabsorption secretion. Filtration: When highly oxygenated, unfiltered blood enters the kidney through the renal artery it goes to the nephrons, upon reaching it splits into a spherical network of blood capillaries called glomerulus that are in a Bowman's capsule, the blood pressure here is so high that fluid and substance from the blood are forced into the Bowman’s capsule, and forms a fluid called the glomerular filtrate. Blood cells and proteins are retained in the blood, while large volumes of water pass through contained dissolved substances such as: water, amino acids, glucose, salts (ions), nitrogenous wastes and other toxic molecules. This process is known as filtration, it separates based on SIZE of molecules, since proteins and RBC are larger then other molecules they cannot pass the Bowmans capsule. Therefore: Substances that the body needs will require reabsorption, so they are not lost with urine. Additional wastes that were in the bloodstream, and managed to escape the higher pressure of the Bowmans capsule need to be added to this 'urine' mixture. Hence this is not the final fluid excretion. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 28 of 37 Reabsorption: Depending on the feedback of the body, varying amounts of solutes are reabsorbed from the solution, for example water, amino acids, glucose, salts (Na+, K+, Cl-, Ca2+, Mg2+, HCO3-). This occurs in the proximal, loop of Henle and distal tubules. In the proximal tube: All organic nutrients (amino acids and glucose) are reabsorbed, aswell as some ions such as (Na+, K+, Cl-, Ca2+, Mg2+, HCO3-). In the loop of Henle: After the initial reabsorption from the distil tube, you'll have a liquid that is primarily urine, whether its concentrated or not, is dependent in the loop of Henle. The loop of Henle has 2 limbs, a descending then ascending, where the descending is permeable to water ONLY, and the descending is permeable to salt ONLY. Secretion: This is the last process and leads to the formation of urine. It occurs in the distil and collecting tubule. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 29 of 37 The liquid present in the tubule, are then added with metabolic wastes (such as urea, ammonia, hydrogen ions, durgs: pencillin, morphine) etc that are brought by active transport to the distil tubule. Explain why the processes of diffusion and osmosis are inadequate in removing dissolved nitrogenous wastes in some organisms: – Diffusion and osmosis are both examples of passive transport (ie they do not require energy), this is too slow for the normal functioning, because the movement of molecules relies on differences in the concentration gradient between two solutions (it moves from high conc. to low conc.) – Also this process greatly slows down once the difference in concentration gradient becomes smaller, and stops once the concentrations are at equilibrium. – Further problems with: Diffusion: Toxins such as drugs can accumulate in the body, and can only be removed if they are in water, hence they would ONLY move if there was a higher concentration of toxins in the blood then the urine itself. And this would stop if the concentrations equalise. Osmosis: Too much water is lost in urine: If there is a high concentration of urine, water will continually be drawn from the body to even out the conc. gradient. However, excretion of dilute urine means the loss of large amount of water from body, a loss to great for terrestrial animals. Osmosis only deals with the movement of water and thus would only allow water to move out of the body, not the nitrogenous wastes. Perform a first-hand investigation of the structure of a mammalian kidney by dissection, use a model or visual resource and identify the regions of the mammalian kidney involved in the excretion of waste products: – Aim: To identify the regions of the mammalian kidney, notably the ones involved in the excretion of waste products. – Equipment: One commercially packed cow (mammalian) kidney One sharp medical cutting scalpel Dissecting tray Clean 'laying' paper Latex gloves Tissue forceps (they are things that help pull skin) Disinfecting agent – Safety: Gloves and protective face masks are crucial, incase of a diseased kidney, or the possible contracting of a disease between touching. Gloves are also crucial in handling of sharp object, incase of accidental damage. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 30 of 37 Disinfecting agent was used on the tray, and the paper, incase of airborne particles that may be ingested and cause allergies or disease. – Material was carefully disposed, to inhibit the build up of bacteria and other organisms. Method: Carefully layer brush the tray with agent, and paper, and place them together. Place the kidney facing sideways, and carefully cut sideways to obtain a 'longitudinal' cut (ie sideway cut), using forceps to open the skin. – Result: The kidney is made up of 3 sections, the pelvis, the medulla and the cortex, the obvious observable sections where located, and an imaginary "large" nephron was placed, to observe where the 3 mains process (ie filteration reabsorption secretion) occur. Cortex: Contains the glomeruli. It is very dark red due to the capillaries It is involved in the filtration of blood. Medulla: Contains the nephron tubules, as can be observed by the striped appearance of the medulla It is involved in the reabsorption and secretion of substances Pelvis: It is where all the collecting ducts connect to, ie the collecting of urine. Gather, process and analyse information from secondary sources to compare the process of renal dialysis with the function of the kidney: hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 31 of 37 – People with disfunctional kidneys are not able to remove wastes such as urea, they have to undergo renal dialysis to regulate their blood. – Renal dialysis is an artificial process in which waste in the blood are removed by diffusion across a partially permeable membrane of solution known as dialysis fluid. It is a solution of salts, glucose, dissolved gases and other substances (it has an equivalent composition to interstitial fluid), wastes (particular urea and excess salts), diffuse out of the blood into the dialysis fluid. The clean blood is then returned. – The process: The blood is extracted from the body from a artery (as it has come from the heart with oxygen, and going to body to pass its waste and regulate levels etc, but it cant as kidney has failed hence blood from artery is used) and passed into a dialyser, which is is a medical unit which is a bundle of hollow fibres made of partially permeable membrane to help units suffering from artery failure. The dialyser is in a solution of dialysing fluid, which has similar concentrations of substances as blood. The dialyser only allows wastes to pass through, and not blood cells and proteins (in this way it is similar to the filtrations stage of the nephron). The wastes diffuse into the solution, and it is constantly replaced The anti-clotting agent, heparin, is also added to prevent clotting. The blood is then returned to the body via a vein. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 32 of 37 – Comparison of dialysis and normal kidney function: Kidneys - Renal Dialysis Continuous process; very efficient - Slow process; occurs a few times a week for patients - Active and passive transport is used throughout - Only passive transport is used - Useful substances are not reabsorbed as they the nephron - Useful substances are reabsorbed actively by the kidney - diffuse into blood from dialysing fluid Uses a series of membranes (nephrons) which - are selectively permeable. Outline the role of Also uses membranes (but artificial) which are selectively permeable. the hormones, aldosterone and ADH (anti-diuretic hormone) in the regulation of water and salt levels in blood: – Recall: Dehydration is defined as an excessive loss of body fluid. Blood volume is the volume of blood (both red blood cells and plasma) in a person's circulatory system. Blood volume is determined by the amount of water and sodium ingested, excreted by the kidneys into the urine. – A hormone is a chemical released by one or more cells that affects cells in other parts of the organism. It is essentially a chemical messenger that transports a signal from one cell to another, only a small amount of hormone is required to alter cell metabolism. All multicellular organisms produce hormones however animals usually produce hormones which are often transported in the blood. – The kidneys maintain constant conditions within the body by excreting wastes such as urea and by regulating the amounts of water and salts that are reabsorbed. This aspect of homeostasis is mainly due to the actions of two hormones: aldosterone and antidiuretic hormone (ADH): – ADH (Anti-Diuretic Hormone): Also called vasopressin, anti-diuretic hormone literally means (anti-'water losing'), diuretic are heavily used in pro-bodybuilding shows to lose water. It controls the reabsorption of water, this is done by adjusting the permeability of the collecting ducts and the distal tubules. Hence a release of it (ie increase levels), increases (sucks) water out from the tubules, hence the urine becomes more concentrated (as less water is present). It is made in the hypothalamus in the brain, but stored in the pituitary gland. Receptors in the hypothalamus monitor the concentration of the blood: High Salt Concentration: ADH levels increased, collecting ducts and distal tubules become more permeable to water, more water reabsorbed, concentration returns to normal. (Concentrated urine) hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 33 of 37 Low Salt Concentration: ADH levels reduced, collecting ducts and distal tubules less permeable to water, less water absorbed, concentration returns to stable state. (Dilute urine) ADH does not control the levels of salt in the blood. It only controls the concentration of salt through water retention. – Aldosterone: Is a hormone that increases the reabsorption of sodium and the release (secretion) of potassium in the kidneys. Hence a release of it (ie increase levels), causes more salts to be sucked out of the tubules. Aldosterone is produced by the outer-section of the adrenal cortex in the adrenal gland, (which sits above the kidney) and acts on the distal tubules and collecting ducts of the kidney. When there is a lack of absorption of salts (ex. NaCl, NH3, K+ etc) , a signal goes to the hypothalamus which triggers the secretion of aldosterone. High Salt Concentration: Aldosterone levels decreased, less salt reabsorbed, hence less water diffusing into body cells. Low Salt Concentration: Aldosterone levels increased, more salt reabsorbed, more water diffusing into body cells. Present information to outline the general use of hormone replacement therapy in people who cannot secrete aldosterone: – This is a second developed technology, where the first was renal dialysis to aid people with affected kidneys. – Addison’s disease is a rare endocrine disorder occurring when the adrenal glands, seated above the kidney, fail to produce enough aldosterone. Without aldosterone, the body would not be able to reabsorb salt (specifically sodium ions) this would cause severe dehydration and excessive potassium loss which may cause brain damage and death. – The artificial replacement hormone is called Fludrocortisone, a drug that decreases the amount of salt the body excretes. It is taken either orally or intravenously, patients are also advised by their doctors to increase their salt intake. Define enantiostasis as the maintenance of metabolic and physiological functions in response to variations in the environment and discuss its importance to estuarine organisms in maintaining appropriate salt concentrations: – Homeostasis is the process by which organisms maintain a relatively stable (constant) or almost constant, internal environment. – Enantiostasis is the maintenance of metabolic and physiological functions in response to variations in the environment. – The difference between the two, is the fact that homeostasis requires only a SPECIFIC internal condition for an organism to function properly, example 37o is the required temperature for humans to function, enantiostasis is for a VARIETY of internal condition which the function can function properly at, for example diving birds rely on enantiostasis to function properly at extremely high and low pressure sky levels. In homeostasis heat is 'acted against' by sweating etc, the pressure for birds isn't 'acted against'; it is 'adapted' to. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 34 of 37 – An estuary is where a freshwater river meets and mixes with saltwater sea, and as such the salinity levels are always changing dramatically. This is determined by the tide of the sea: At high tide: sea water flows into the river mouth, creating an environment with higher salt concentration, hence this salt water has the tendency to draw water out cells by osmosis (as the organism will be in freshwater) At low tide: sea water flows out of the river mouth, and freshwater from the estuary is abundant, hence by diffusion organism face the challenge of water moving into their tissue. – Organisms living in such an environment need to have mechanisms to cope with such changes in order to survive, this is collectively called enantiostasis. – Enantiostasis is carried out by 2 process (these are present in normal homestasis conditions too, but they carry out different roles): Osmoconformation: process by which organisms tolerate the changes in the environment, and conform, or alter the concentration of their internal solutes to match the external environment. Their metabolism can handle it. Osmoregulation: is the control of the levels of water and mineral salts in the blood. Process and analyse information from secondary sources and use available evidence to discuss processes used by different plants for salt regulation in saline environments: – Salt, even in small concentrations, has a damaging effect on cell metabolism. – Halophytes are plants that adapted and can tolerate high salt levelled environments, they are commonly found in areas such as estuaries. Grey Mangroves (Avicennia marina): – Salt Prevention: In its roots, it has a layer of cells that actively restrict the movement of salt into xylem vessels. Salt Exclusion: Special glands in the mangroves can actively exclude the salt from the water, so that the water absorbed has a lower salt concentration than the water in the environment. Salt Accumulation: Salt is accumulated in old leaves that drop off, so that the salt is out of the plant’s system Salt Excretion: Salt can be excreted from the underside of the leaves of the mangrove plants; salt crystals form under the leaves. Describe adaptations of a range of terrestrial Australian plants that assist in minimising water loss: Perform a first-hand investigation to gather information about structures in plants that assist in the conservation of water: – Aim: To gather information from plant specimens about structures that assist in the conservation of water. – Equipment: Different type of leafs that exist around the school (typical environment) Hand lens – Safety: Sun has strong UV light outside, sunscreen and hats should be worn. Leaf can be diseased and can have splinters and can be sharp, gloves should be worn. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 35 of 37 – Method: Carefully, leaves where looked at for different 'prominent' features that could inhibit water loss, these where then cross-checked with reliable sources. – Result: Banksia: Leaves have sunken stomates: this reduces transpiration. Hard, waxy cuticles: this reduces the amount of water loss through transpiration. Eucalyptus trees: Hard, waxy cuticles: this reduces the amount of water loss through transpiration. Leaves hang vertically: reduce sun exposure. Spinifex grass: Have extensive root systems that can reach underground water. Leaves are also long and thin: to reduce water loss by transpiration. Can roll up to hide their stomata's: this reduces the amount of water loss through transpiration. Analyse information from secondary sources to compare and explain the differences in urine concentration of terrestrial mammals, marine fish and freshwater fish: – Freshwater Fish: Osmotic Problem: Hypotonic to environment. Water diffuses INTO their bodies. Salts diffuses out. Role of Kidney: Doesn’t drink continually, Kidneys removes excess water, while reabsorbing salts. Urine: Large, dilute amount. – Marine Fish: Osmotic Problem: Hypertonic to environment. Water diffuses OUT of their bodies. Salt diffuses in. Role of Kidney: Continually drinks water, Kidneys reabsorb water, while actively secreting salts. (Salt is also excreted across gills) – Urine: Small, concentrated amount. Terrestrial Mammals: Osmotic Problem: Water needs to be conserved. Role of Kidney: Regulates concentration of blood, while at the same time excretes urea and conserves water. Urine: Concentration changes with the availability of water, as well as temperature and water loss through sweat. Water levels in blood rise, urine amount rises, and concentration decreases and vice versa. Explain the relationship between the conservation of water and the production and excretion of concentrated nitrogenous wastes in a range of Australian insects and terrestrial animals: – Ammonia is the direct result of amino acid breakdown (deamination) and is a waste product of all organisms. It is very water soluble, but VERY toxic, and must be removed quickly, or changed to a less toxic form. – The removal of ammonia would require large volumes of water, and this is not possible for animals or insects that seek to conserve water. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 36 of 37 Aquatic Animals and Fish: These organisms directly release AMMONIA into the environment. This uses a lot of water, but they have no need to conserve it. Ammonia is very water soluble and is excreted through the gills. Terrestrial Animals: Releasing ammonia would be impossible due to lack of water. Instead, land-dwellers change ammonia into less toxic forms and release it periodically. Mammals change it into UREA and release it as urine (ex; kangaroos, wallabies, hopping mice and koalas). Australian animals release very concentrated urine, and are able to tolerate high levels of urea in their bodies. Birds: Birds change ammonia into URIC ACID, a whitish paste which uses hardly any water. This is lighter than using urea, and helps in flight. Insects: Insects also change ammonia to URIC ACID. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 37 of 37 9.2 - Maintaining a Balance: 1. Most organisms are active within a limited temperature range: • Identify the role of enzymes in metabolism, describe their chemical composition and use a simple model to describe their specificity in substrates: – Role of enzymes in metabolism: • Metabolism refers to all the chemical reactions occurring in organisms • Anabolism- synthesis of larger molecules from smaller ones • Catabolism- Breakdown of larger molecules into simpler ones • Examples of cellular processes involved in metabolism- respiration, glycolysis, photosynthesis, protein synthesis • Chemical reactions needed to: ∗ Obtain energy ∗ Build new chemicals for growth and repair of cell ∗ Make substances needed by other cells • Enzymes are biological catalysts which accelerate chemical reactions ∗ Without enzymes, metabolism would be too slow to support life ∗ Important in cells as heat damages living cells • Lowering of activation energy ∗ Enzymes do not produce activation energy rather they reduce the amount of activation energy ∗ Lower the activation energy to start a reaction so that the reaction can proceed quickly without a change in temperature • Example of enzyme (Sucrase) ∗ Sucrose- Sugar used in sweets and cakes- obtained by crushing out the contents of phloem tissue of sugarcane plants ∗ This carbohydrate consists of 2 simpler sugar molecules- one glucose and one fructose molecule ∗ Sucrose- too large to be absorbed into the bloodstream from digestive system ∗ Broken down in the small intestines into its 2 component sugars by an enzyme called sucrose ∗ Molecules of glucose and fructose are small enough to be directly absorbed through the membranes of the digestive system into the blood stream Substrate Products Sucrase enzyme present Sucrose molecule • Glucose + Fructose Another example (Maltase) ∗ Maltose sugar- found in a lot of sweets ∗ Needs to be digested using an enzyme before it can be absorbed into the bloodstream hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 1 of 51 Substrate Products Maltase Maltose molecule • • • Glucose + Glucose Enzymes are very specific Each enzyme changes the rate of one kind of chemical reaction only Many different enzymes within each organism to control all the reactions that are part of the organism’s metabolism • Chemical composition of enzymes: • Most enzymes are made up of protein • Proteins are composed of long chains of amino acids joined together by peptide bonds • 20 different amino acids make up proteins and enzymes in organims • These long chains are called polypeptide chains • Proteins consist of one or more polypeptide chains • The shape of each enzyme makes it able to take part in a specific kind of chemical reaction Structure of enzymes: • In enzymes, the polypeptide chain is folded into a 3-dimensional globular • shape • Active site- where the enzyme binds to the substrate • The substrate are the molecules the enzymes acts upon Specificity of enzymes: • Enzymes are highly specific in their action; this means that each enzyme acts • on one substrate only • This is because the shape of the active site of the enzyme matches the shape of the substrate material • The molecules the enzyme act upon are called the substrate • The substrate molecules bind to the active site and a chemical reaction occurs • The products are the substances that the substrate(s) become. One substrate • can be split, or two substrates can be joined hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 2 of 51 Enzyme models The Lock and Key Model • Enzyme must fit the shape of the substance for it to influence a chemical reaction • suggests that the substrate fits exactly into the active site of the enzyme like a key fits into a lock. It assumes that the enzyme had a rigid and unchanging shape. • The enzyme is sometimes referred to as the 'lock' and the initial reactant substrate molecule as the 'key' • This is where only one small part of the enzyme molecule can form a complex with the substrate. This part of the molecule is called the active site. • Only a specific substrate(s) can bond in that site and this makes the enzyme specific to that substrate. The Induced Fit Model • states that the binding of the substrate to the enzyme ‘induces’ a temporary change in shape of the enzyme. • The new shape of the enzyme better accommodates the shape of the substrate and a reaction occurs. • It suggests that the active site continues to change until the substrate is completely bound to it, at which point the final shape and charge is determined. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 3 of 51 Identify the pH as a way of describing the acidity of a substance: • pH means the power or concentration of dissolved hydrogen in the solution • The substance that makes a solution acidic is hydrogen ions • pH is a measure of the acidity or the alkalinity of a substance • The pH scale is from 0 to 14: a pH of 7 is neutral (pure water); above 7 is alkaline/ basic and below 7 is acidic • On pH scale a change in one pH unit is a change in concentration of 10 times e.g. pH 14 is 10 times more basic than pH 13 • pH of a solution can be found by: 1. Using an electronic probe or sensor 2. Using universal indicator Factors affecting enzymes identify data sources, plan, choose equipment or resources and perform a first-hand investigation to test the effect of: – increased temperature – change in pH – change in substrate concentrations on the activity of named enzyme(s) (IN BIO PRAC BOOK) 1. Changing pH: • Many enzymes work best at a pH that is just slightly alkaline • Decreasing or increasing acidity from the optimum (the best possible) pH reduces the activity of an enzyme. • Enzymes change shape and are denatured (take away natural qualities) when the pH varies too much from their optimum • Any change in pH above or below the Optimum will quickly cause a decrease in the rate of reaction, since more of the enzyme molecules will have Active Sites whose shapes are not, or at least less, Complementary to the shape of their Substrate. • Small changes in pH above or below the Optimum do not cause a permanent change to the enzyme, since the bonds can be reformed but extreme changes are irreversible. 2. Changing temperature • Decreasing temperature decreases the activity of an enzyme- molecules have lower energy • Increasing temperature increases its activity until the shape of the enzyme begins to alter • If the temperature is high enough to permanently change the enzyme’s shape then the enzyme is denatured and can no longer catalyse the reaction • Human optimum temp- 35-40’c • Enzymes that are partially denatured by heat may regain their correct shape on cooling but complete denaturation is irreversible hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 4 of 51 3. Changing substrate concentration • Decreasing the concentration of substrate decreases the activity of an enzyme • Increasing the concentration of substrate increases its activity until all the enzyme is involved in catalysing reactions • If substrate concentration is increased an enzyme concentration stays the same then the rate of reaction will increase to a point and then remain constant caused by all active sites on the enzyme molecule being occupied known as the saturation point. A further increase in substrate molecules cannot increase the rate of reaction cause no more active sites available. Cofactors- inorganic chemicals that help catalyse, either by binding tightly to the enzyme’s active site as permanent residents or by bonding loosely alone with the substrate Coenzymes- perform same function but are organic molecules Enzyme inhibitors- certain chemicals inhibit the action of specific enzymes, either by attaching to the active site or changing its shape. Explain why the maintenance of a constant internal environment is important for optimal metabolic efficiency: – Enzymes are essential for proper metabolic function in an organism – However, enzyme efficiency is affected greatly by certain factors – These include: _ Temperature _ pH _ Substrate concentration – Enzymes work best within a limited range therefore, a constant and stable internal environment is needed so that enzymes will always be working at an optimum rate, and thus metabolism will be at an optimum efficiency hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 5 of 51 Describe homeostasis as the process by which organisms maintain a relatively stable internal environment: – Homeostasis is the process by which the body maintains a stable internal Environment despite changes in the external environment – Multicellular organisms regulate their internal environment in order to remain Healthy – The internal environment of cells are kept within certain limits by the coordinating systems of the body – These systems monitor all the activities of cells, their requirements and the wastes they produce -Homeostasis keeps conditions as close to the optimum as possible so that the organism’s metabolism can operate as efficiently as possible - Through homeostasis, organism maintain an internal equilibrium (stableness) by adjusting physiological processes through the use of feedback systems -Feedback systems are a self regulating mechanism that maintains homeostasis (a balance). -Role: maintain conditions and reaction within the small range to sustain life -Consists of 3 main parts: 1. Receptor- monitors/ detects changes in the internal and external environment 2. Control centre (hypothalamus)- monitors information passed from the receptor and determines and appropriate response. 3. Effectors- carries a message from the control centre Explain that homeostasis consists of two stages _ Detecting changes from the stable state; _ Counteracting changes from the stable state: hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 6 of 51 If homeostasis is to be maintained; the body must be able to detect stimuli that indicate a change in internal / external environment. Stage 1)– Detecting Changes: The body needs to maintain a ‘stable state’ in order to function properly Made possible by the presence of receptors in living organisms _Receptors in body tissues detect changes in the environment (internal & external). - Mechanoreceptors Photoreceptors Chemoreceptors Thermoreceptors. Messages sent along neurones (nerve cells) as an electrochemical impulse. Brain receives & interprets message. Receptors detect a change in the variable. _ Changes, or deviations, from the stable state are caused by the external and internal environment _ Any change, or information, that provokes a response is called a STIMULUS _ RECEPTORS detect stimuli; organisms then react to the change _ There are two types of receptors within the body: _ Disturbance receptors: These receptors, usually in the skin, detect changes caused by the external environment _ Misalignment receptors: These receptors detect changes from the body’s stable state. _ Examples of external stimuli: light, day length, sound, temperature, odours _ Examples of internal stimuli: levels of CO2, oxygen levels, water, wastes, etc. Stage 2)-Counteracting Changes: • • • • • • • Brain responds to message by sending a nervous message to an effector to counteract the changes in the environment. Effectors counteract the change (muscle / gland). After receptors detect changes, organisms can then react to the change. When a change affects the organism’s normal/ stable state, the response is homeostatic. This type of response will counteract the change to ensure the stable state is maintained brought about by effectors EFFECTORSbring about responses to stimuli Can either be muscles or glands. Muscles bring about change by movement. Glands bring about change by secreting chemical substances hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 7 of 51 Gather, process and analyse information from secondary sources and use available evidence to develop a model of a feedback mechanism Homeostasis is maintained by feedback mechanisms. The response to a change may involve negative or position feedback: - Negative feedback acts to counteract any changes in the cells. For example, if blood sugar levels are high the response counteracts this change by reducing blood sugar levels. - Positive feedback operates by reinforcing the changes in the cell No Change Figure 2: Homeostatic control of blood glucose levels hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 8 of 51 Negative feedback: • A specific change that results in a response opposite to the initial situation • E.g. in humans if body temp becomes too low (stimulus), the person may shiver (response). The shivering generates heat and the body becomes warmer (new stimulus). The feedback mechanism monitors the rise in temperature and will cause the opposite to the initial response- it will stop the shivering Positive feedback • The monitoring will re-enforce and amplify the situation, causing more of the same situation to take place • E.g- process of labour. Once labour begins, it needs to be completed quickly to avoid unduly stressing both mother and baby. The pressure of the baby’s head near the opening of the uterus stimulates uterine contractions, which cause greater pressure against the uterus opening, heightening the contractions which causes still greater pressure. Outline the role of the nervous system in detecting and responding to environmental changes: – The nervous system works to regulate and maintain an animal’s internal environment and respond to the external environment - Important in homeostasis - Sensory nerves of peripheral N.Sdetects changes. They are the receptors and they carry the message to the brain - CNS(Brain) – response to counteract the change is decided. message is sent back to the affected body parts via the motor nerves of the P.N.S. These are the effectors -Role of nervous system: 1. Detect information about animals internal and external environment and then coordinates the body’s response to these changes 2.Transmit information to a control centre 3. Information processed in the control centre, generates a response – The nervous system is made up of two parts: _ Central Nervous System: - acts as the CONTROL CENTRE for all of the body’s responses. - It coordinates all the responses. - made up of the brain and the spinal cord. - receives information, interprets it and initiates a response. - Hypothalamus one of these regions of regulate release of hormone responsible for - controlling many variables (major role in maintaining homeostasis). -Thalamus receives impulses from sensory neurones, directs them to parts of the brain. _ Peripheral Nervous System: - This is a branching system of nerves that connects receptors and effectors. - This system transmits messages from the central nervous system and back. - It acts as a communication channel. - Composed of all neurons outside the CNS hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 9 of 51 - Includes sensory and motor neurons Sensory neurons- transmit messages to the CNSfrom receptor organs Motor neurons- Transmit messages from the CNS to the effector organs such as muscles – The nervous system works closely with the endocrine system- This system produces hormones in response to certain stimuli in order to maintain homeostasis Identify the broad range over which life is found compared with the narrow limits for individual species: – Ambient temperature is the temperature of the environment – The range of temperatures over which life is found is broad compared to the narrow limits for individual species – Life can only exist between temperatures because: • Enzymes that catalyse the reactions of metabolism are very temperature sensitive- stable but slow if too cold and unstable and denature when too hot • Many cell membrane proteins only function properly of they are floating in the lipid bilayer - Organisms live in environments with ambient temperatures ranging from less than 70 degrees (at the poles) to over 50 degrees (in deserts). - Individual organisms cannot survive this whole range of temperatures. To survive, organisms must be able to live within the temperature range of their local environment. - This means that life is found in a very wide range of temperatures, but individual species can only be found in a narrow temperature range in which they can survive (Eg humans can only survive unclothed and unsheltered from 27°C to 43°C) because of certain behavioral, structural and physiological adaptations hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 10 of 51 Compare responses of named Australian ectothermic and endothermic organisms to changes in the ambient temperature and explain how these responses assist in temperature regulation: – ECTOTHERMS(cold blooded) organisms that have a limited ability to control their body temperature. Their cellular activities generate little heat. Their body temperatures rise and fall with ambient temperature changes. Most organisms are ectotherms.(cold blooded) Examples are plants, all invertebrates, fish, amphibians and reptiles – ENDOTHERMSare organisms whose metabolism generates enough heat to maintain an internal temperature independent of the ambient temperature (warm blooded) Examples are birds and mammals Heat exchange with the environment: All organisms exchange heat with their external environment in 4 ways: 1. Conduction: direct transfer of heat from the environment to the body surface 2. Convention: transfer of heat by the movement of air or liquid past the body surface 3. Radiation: Transfer of heat by electromagnetic waves between objects that rent in contact 4. Evaporation: heat loss form the surface of a liquid when it changes to a gas hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 11 of 51 Behavioural adaptations: - Ways that organisms behave in order to help it survive in its environment - E.G. Migration, nocturnal activity, burrowing, basking Structural adaptations: - Physical features of the organism that help it survive e.g. shape, appearance, structure • Insulation-Fur in mammals & feathers in birds trap a layer of air that slows down heat exchange with the external environment. - Thickness of fur / feathers can be changed with changing seasons. - Subcutaneous fat traps heat beneath skin. - eg. Cockatoo. - Can contract muscles to lift feathers up in cold conditions. - eg. Whales. - Have layer of blubber to prevent transfer of heat to water. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 12 of 51 • Piloerection: - ‘Hair standing on end’ - Important for most mammals. - Trapped air beneath hair/ fur acts as insulation. - Sympathetic neurones carry impulses from hypothalamus to base of each hair, muscle contracts, hair stands on end. • Surface area : volume: - Large volume with small surface area loses heat less efficiently than - large surface area & small volume. - E.G. Blubber as insulation in whales/ dolphins, animal fur Physiological adaptations: - a change metabolism or biochemistry to deal with an environmental problem i.e. realted to - the functioning of the organism body E.G. endotherms speed up their metabolism in cold environment or hibernate in winter hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 13 of 51 Example of an Australian endotherm and ectotherm Name of Endothermic or Adaptation/ response organism ectothermic Red kangaroo Endothermic Keeping warm: • Produces heat to keep warm using its metabolism • Insulating covering of fur • Obtains heat by being active and in direct sunlight Keeping cool: • Less active during warm periods of the day • Seeks shelter under shade • Pants (rapid, shallow breaths), so that heat is lost from its nasal passages (air passages inside its nose) • Licks its forearms so saliva evaporates and cools the skin and blood below • Sweats through its skin when it is active Australian diamond python Ectothermic hscintheholidays.com.au Cold conditions: • Lies on eggs and shivers to create more heat within the body • Dark in colour to absorb heat and therefore can tolerate colder temperatures than most snakes • Bask in sun to raise body temp • Hibernate during winter • Migrate to warmer areas Warm conditions: • Nocturnal- hunting at night • Burrowing during the day All Rights Reserved. Behavioral, Structural, Physiological • Physiological • Structural • Behavioral • Behavioral • Behavioral • Structural • Behavioral • Physiological • Physiological • Structural • • • Behavioral Behavioral Behavioral • • Behavioral Behavioral Page 14 of 51 Identify some responses of plants to temperature change: Enzymes in plants have same characteristics to those in animals. Have optimum temperature at which maximal efficiency occurs. Plants tend to maintain temperature in optimal range for optimal metabolic activity to occur & to minimise damage. Optimal temperature is also required for germination of seeds & growth Responses to change; - In extreme heat or cold, plants can die, but leave behind dormant seeds. - Plants may die above the ground, but leave bulbs, roots, rhizomes or tubers to survive underground. These then sprout when favourable conditions return - Vernalisation: this means that some plants need exposure to cold condition before they can flower - Seed dispersal is also stimulated sometimes by fire Leaf Fall • • Plants reduce their surface area exposed to heat by dropping their leaves. This also reduces the amount of water that is lost through transpiration. Radiation • Some plants living in very exposed areas, such as sand dunes, reduce the amount of heat absorbed by having shiny leaves that reflect solar radiation. Heat-Shock Proteins • These are proteins produced by plants that are under stress from very high temperatures. These molecules are thought to stop enzymes denaturing, so normal cell reactions can continue. Transpiration • • The movement of water up the plant from the roots to the leaves via the transpiration system serves to cool the plant during hot conditions. The evaporation of the water from the stomata of the leaves also serve to cool the plant. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 15 of 51 Die back • In harsh conditions the shoots and leaves of a plant may die, but left in the soil are bulbs, roots or rhizoids that will begin to grow again when favourable conditions return. Orientation of Leaves • Vertical orientation of some leaves has the advantage of reducing the amount of leaf surface area in contact with sun rays, e.g. Eucalyptus leaves hang vertically. Seed Dispersal • • Some Australian natives require extremely high temperatures, such as those produced by a fire, to germinate their seeds. Plant seeds from species such as Banksia ericifolia are only able to open their seed coats when they are exposed to fire. Vernalisation • This is when plants must be exposed to cold conditions to produce flowers and therefore reproduce. Plants in alpine regions use vernalisation to reproduce when conditions are more favourable at the end of winter. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 16 of 51 • ∗ The presence of cold conditions will stimulate flowers to grow, and when spring approaches they are almost mature. Many native plants They flower afterrespond fire to high temps caused by bushfires by: Have fruits that open and release seed after fire Have seeds that need to be heated in a fire to germinate EXAMPLES: hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 17 of 51 Alpine groundsel ∗ ∗ ∗ ∗ ∗ ∗ ∗ Australian plant- Kosciuszko area of NSW and victoria Air temp in those areas vary between -10’c and 3’c Plant is small so it is buried by snow during the coldest parts of the year Snow cover protects the plant, keeping its temp around 0’c Leaves and stems remove the moisture to reduce the risk of damage to the cells caused if water freezes inside them Hairy layer on leaves and stems reduces likelihood of freezing (and reduces water loss) Roots and sub-soil buds are close to the surface where the soil rarely freezes Mulga ∗ ∗ ∗ ∗ Australian tree that lives in dry areas of most states Leaves have a thick silvery cuticle (outer layer) that reflects and insulates against heat (as well as reducing water loss) Shape of tree means that water falling on the plant runs down leaves and stems to the base of the tree to be absorbed by its roots Adequate water is essential to prevent overheating of the plant tissues Gather, process and analyse information from secondary sources and use available evidence to develop a model of a feedback mechanism: – Homeostasis involves the detection of the change in the environment and the response to that change – The mechanism that brings about this change is called FEEDBACK – In feedback systems, the response alters the stimulus – In living organisms, the feedback system has 3 main parts: _ Receptors: A type of sensor that constantly monitors the internal environment _ Control Centre: Receives info from the receptors and determines the response _ Effector: Restores the set value. Keeps environments stable. (IN BIO PRAC BOOK- RESEARCH TASK) hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 18 of 51 hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 19 of 51 (In BIO PRAC BOOK) hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 20 of 51 2. Plants and animals transport dissolved nutrients and gases in a fluid medium: Identify the forms in which each of the following is carried in mammalian blood: _ Carbon Dioxide _ Oxygen _ Water _ Salts _ Lipids _ Nitrogenous wastes _ Other products of digestion • The mammalian circulatory system has four main functions: 1. TRANSPORT: The major function of the circulatory system is to transport water, gases, nutrients and wastes. 2. BLOOD CLOTTING: This complex mechanism repairs damage to blood vessels and seals wounds to prevent loss of blood 3. DEFENCE AGAINST DISEASE: White blood cells help to fight infection in the body. Antibodies provide immunity against further attack 4. TEMPERATURE REGULATOIN: The flow of blood distributes heat around the body. Control of the amount of blood passing close to the skin helps control heat loss from the body. Composition Of The Blood: • PLASMA: make up 55% of the volume of the blood. sticky, straw-coloured and slightly salty. Substances transported in the plasma include waste minerals It is made up of 90% water. Other substances found in the plasma include: _ salts (as ions) _ plasma proteins (including antibodies, clotting factors, lipid transporters) _ products of digestion (sugars, amino acids, hormones, etc) _ waste products (carbon dioxide, urea) • BLOOD CELLS: Red Blood Cells: Also called erythrocytes Shape is bi-concave discs, thinner at centre than at edges Contains the pigment haemoglobin Their function is to transport respiratory gases; mainly oxygen They have no nuclei; they only live for 3 months. After this they are destroyed in the liver or spleen. They are produced in the bone marrow 6-8um hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 21 of 51 _ White Blood Cells: Also called leucocytes Shape is irregular; can change shape Function: to defend against disease The two main types of leucocytes are phagocytes and lymphocytes 1. PHAGOCYTES surround and ingest foreign bodies, bacteria and dead cells and collect around areas of infection or injury 2. LYMPHOCYTES act only on specific foreign material. They make antibodies which help the body’s defence against disease. much less common than red blood cells They are the largest blood cell They have nuclei, unlike red blood cells They are produced in the lymph nodes and glands. PLATELETS: They are fragments of old cells made in the bone marrow function is to make the blood clot Smallest blood cell No nucleus – Transporting Substances In The Blood: CARBON DIOXIDE: • Most carbon dioxide enters the red blood cells and is combined and altered to form bicarbonates • It is produced as a waste product of respiration in body cells. After entering the bloodstream it may: 1. Be converted into carbonic acid which is then changed into hydrogen carbonate ions. This change from carbon dioxide to carbonate ions happens on the red blood cells. Then they are transported in the plasma (only 70% of the carbon dioxide). 2. Binds to haemoglobin in erythrocytes forming carbaminohaemoglobin (only 23% of the carbon dioxide). 3. Be dissolved directly in the plasma (only 7% of the carbon dioxide). OXYGEN: 1. Oxygen is needed in the body for respiration. It is brought in across the respiratory surfaces of the lungs. 2. Some are dissolved directly into the plasma as oxygen gas 3. It binds with haemoglobin in red blood cells, forming oxyhaemoglobin. - O2 diffuses from the external environment into the blood; through alveoli. - Diffuses from air into blood due to concentration gradient. - Less in blood than in the air ... moves into the blood. - Circulates throughout body to cells via circulatory system. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 22 of 51 • In the lungs: - When O2 concentration is high; Hb + 4O2 Hb(O2)4 Haemoglobin + Oxygen oxyhaemoglobin • In body tissues: - O2 concentration is low Hb(O2)4 Hb + 4O2 WATER: 1) Water is the solvent of plasma 2) made up of 90% of the blood plasma hence carried as water molecules in the plasma 3) It makes up 60% of the volume of blood SALTS: 1. Carried as ions dissolved in the plasma 2. E.G. sodium, potassium, magnesium, etc LIPIDS: 1lipids are encases in a protein coat, and becomes lipoproteins dissolved in plasma 2.Digested lipids are changed into triglycerides (this happens in the lining of the small intestine). 3. Triglycerides, together with phospholipids and cholesterol, are wrapped in a coat of protein to form a package called a chylomicron. 3.These are released into the lymph and eventually pass into the veins NITROGENOUS WASTES: 1. Wastes such as ammonia are changed in urea 2. Uric acid are dissolved directly in the plasma OTHER PRODUCTS OF DIGESTION: 1. Includes amino acids, sugars, glycerol and vitamins 2. They are mainly water soluble and transported and dissolved directly in the plasma hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 23 of 51 Explain the adaptive advantage of haemoglobin: – Structure of haemoglobin: _ Globule-shaped protein containing four polypeptide sub-units _ 4 polypeptide chains: 1. 2 identical alpha chains 2. 2 identical beta chains _ Each polypeptide encloses an IRON-containing structure, called the HAEM group (4 HAEM groups altogether) _ The haem groups combine with the oxygen. – Oxygen fuses with haemoglobin where the concentration of oxygen in the blood is low; that is, in the lungs. – It makes an unstable compound – oxyhaemoglobin – One haemoglobin molecule can carry four molecules of oxygen – Where oxygen is needed, the oxygen bond easily breaks and the oxygen is used. Adaptive Advantage: _ Mammalian cells need a lot of energy and therefore must have a continual supply of OXYGEN for RESPIRATION energy through respiration hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 24 of 51 _ This ability of blood to carry large quantities of oxygen gives mammals a considerable survival advantage e.g • • • - Organisms with blood (containing haemoglobin) are able to deliver oxygen to cells more efficiently than other organisms with blood that has no haemoglobin. The net effect is that these organisms are more effective operators in a given environment than their competitors. This higher rate of respiration allows an increase in the amount of released energy which can allow the animal to: move faster, grow large, live in cold areas and give mammals the ability to maintain a constant body temperature enabling them to be active in a large temperature range for example. The structure of haemoglobin is also an adaptive advantage because it is a type of molecule that can combine with oxygen loosely at the respiratory surfaces and then release the oxygen freely in capillaries. Compare the structure of arteries, capillaries and veins in relation to their function: – ARTERIES: _ Carry blood away from heart (high blood pressure) _ The pressure created by the heart’s pumping creates great stress in the arteries _ This is why the arteries are thick walled, elastic and muscular. _ The arteries are not motionless; they have muscle fibres in them which can contract and relax. _ This contracting maintains the pressure on the blood, so that the blood travels in spurts towards the body tissues (the contracting and relaxing also creates the pulse on your wrist or neck). _ The muscle fibres of the arteries also maintain the rate of the flow of blood. _ Arteries usually carry oxygenated blood _ Arteries lead to arterioles (small arteries). CAPILLARIES: _ Capillaries are an extension of the inner layers of the arteries and veins _ They join arterioles and venules (small veins) _ Capillaries are only one cell thick, and are so narrow, that only one red blood cell can pass at a time. _ Capillaries surround all tissue cells _ Thus, they provide a very large surface area over which exchange of materials between blood and body can occur. VEINS: _ Veins carry blood back to the heart _ The capillaries join to form venules, which join to form veins _ Veins are not under a lot of stress - blood pressure is low _ This is why they have thinner walls than arteries, less muscle and a wider diameter. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 25 of 51 _ Since there are no thick muscular walls to keep the blood pulsing along, the veins have a series of valves which prevent the blood from back-flowing on its way back up to the heart. _ The veins also run through muscles, such as your leg muscles, and as you use these muscles, they press on the veins, pushing blood through the veins. Describe the main changes in the composition of the blood as it moves around the body and identify tissues in which these changes occur: PULMONARY CIRCUIT: • _ Blood flows from heart to lungs and then back to the heart • _ Blood is under lower pressure than in the systemic circuit • _ However, the rate of blood flow is faster • _ Very little body fluid is formed • _ The blood, having just returned from the body, contains high CO2 levels and • low oxygen levels • _ In the lungs, blood loses CO2 collects oxygen SYSTEMICCIRCUIT: • Blood flows from the heart to the body (except the lungs) and returns back to the heart • Blood is under high pressure due to contractions of the left ventricle of the heart, but pressure gradually lessens • Blood pressure forces some fluid out of blood to become body fluid • In the tissues: 1. Blood gives up oxygen and other ions and nutrients 2. Waste products, eg urea, CO2, enter the blood hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 26 of 51 KIDNEYS: • Blood loses urea and has the composition of water and salt balanced INTESTINES: • Blood collects the products of digestion • Levels of glucose, lipids, and amino acids rise LIVER: • Regulates the level of glucose in blood • Excess glucose is converted to glycogen and is stored • Converts excess amino acids to urea Changes in blood composition 1) Excess vitamins broken down in the liver to form urea 2) Liver stores salt in the form of glycogen 3) Water, old red blood cells and glucose are broken down by liver and is .: expected to be less of them in the blood leaving the liver 4) Amino acids leaves the blood via the kidney as it is toxic 5) Excess bicarbonate leave the blood through the kidney 6) Carbon dioxide in the form of dissolved bicarbonate ions leaves the blood through the lungs as it would otherwise make the blood too toxic 7) Blood entering the right side of the heart is high in carbon dioxide and low in oxygen 8) It is sent to the lungs where it picks up oxygen and deposits carbon dioxide 9) Blood leaving the left side of the heart id high in oxygen and low in carbon dioxide hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 27 of 51 Outline the need for oxygen in living cells and explain why the removal of carbon dioxide from cells is essential: – All living cells need oxygen for respiration to produce energy that is required to maintain metabolic processes, to survive and reproduce – As a result of respiration, carbon dioxide is produced –if a lot of carbon dioxide is produced, the body cells (and the blood and lymph) will become acidic Describe current theories about processes responsible for the movement of materials through plants in xylem and phloem tissue: hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 28 of 51 In XYLEM: • Xylem cells are dead at maturity, so physical processes are responsible for the upward movement of water and minerals. Passive transport and one-way only (up). • Transport of water is passive and depends on transpiration and the physical properties of water. A current theory, called the cohesion-tension theory: 1) Cohesion: Water molecules tend to bind together, forming a continuous Column in the xylem, which replaces any loss 2) Transpiration: Water is evaporated through stomates and replaced by water from leaf cells and xylem tissue. 3) Tension: Water moves up the xylem like wire being pulled up, due to cohesion. 4) Adhesion: When the pull stops, water sticks to the sides of the tube and does not fall down capillarity. 1. Transpiration: Evaporation of water from the leaf cells through the stomates initiates the pull of the TRANSPIRATON STREAM. Water is then drawn up the xylem tubes to replace this loss 2. Cohesion: Water molecules tend to bind together, forming a continuous column in the xylem, which replaces any loss 3. Adhesion: Water molecules stick to the sides of the xylem tubes (cellulose walls). In phloem: • Movement of materials through phloem is called translocation. • Materials move both up and down the stem. • Materials are distributed especially to the growing points and reproductive structures, including developing fruits and seeds. • Flow of materials in the phloem is an active process that requires energy. • It is thought to occur by a mechanism called the source-path-sink system and Is driven by a gradient generated osmotically. ‘Source-to-sink’ mechanism: • Sugars can move via translocation in any direction but always from a place where they are abundant (sugar source) to a place they are needed (sugar sink). • Sieve elements accumulate solutes such as sugars from leaves. • Companion cells also accumulate solutes & deliver them to sieve elements. • At these sites the sugar concentration is high causing entry of water. • The resulting pressure causes water and solutes to flow along under the force of turgor pressure to the places where sugar is being removed (sink). Theory 1: the source-path-sink system • Sugars and other mineral nutrients are ‘loaded’ into phloem sieve tubes of the leaves. • As sugars enter the phloem the concentration of phloem sap increases causes the entry of water by osmosis from the surrounding cells. • This resulting pressure causes water and dissolved solutes to flow towards a sink. • A sink region of the plant where sugars and other nutrients are actively removed from the phloem. • As sugars move out of the phloem, water flows out with them. This reduces the pressure in the sieve cells at the sink region. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 29 of 51 Theory 2: • sugars moved through the phloem by cytoplasmic streaming and active diffusion within the sieve tubes. Analyse information from secondary sources to identify the products extracted from donated blood and discuss the uses of these products: While whole blood is used for some transfusions, several different things are often extracted to make its usage more effective and efficient. These are: * Red blood cells - used in people who have problems with transporting • oxygen (ie – anaemia), or to help replace blood cells following significant bleeding from trauma or surgery. It increases haemoglobin levels while not increasing blood volume. * White blood cells- used for patients who are not producing their own • white blood cells to assist patients to fight infection * Platelets - used to promote blood clotting and control bleeding. It is often • used for leukaemia and bone marrow transplant patients. * Stable protein plasma is used in emergencies before whole blood • becomes available. It is also used in patients with burns, who tend to lose fluid rather than whole blood. Plasma is also further processed to make: - Cryoprecipitate which contains blood clotting proteins. Used for liver transplant patients, treatment of massive bleeding and patients who have deficiencies of the blood clotting proteins (Haemophilia A). - Cryosupernate which undergoes further processing to produce Anti D (prevents Rhesus in newborns), Immunoglobulin (carries antibodies against common infectious diseases) and Intragam (boosts immune system, used in treatment of some muscle and nerve disorders). * Clotting factors can be used in people with severe bleeding problems, such as • haemophilia. * Immunoglobins are antibodies used to protect people against infectious diseases • such as hepatitis, chickenpox and tetanus & in people with immune system problems, such as AIDS. * Serum albumin is used in people with low plasma protein levels, such as those • with liver/ kidney disease. It is used to restore blood volume in the treatment of burns and severe shock. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 30 of 51 Name of product Fresh Frozen Plasma Description How it is prepared Shelf life* Fresh frozen Separated 12 plasma. from whole months Replaces blood by at -25'C coagulation centrifugation factors if platelet concentration is not available or appropriate Helps Centrifuge Platelet clotting of plasma and concentrate blood, used remove to treat platelets patients with dysfunctional platelets, leukaemia patients and those with other form of cancer hscintheholidays.com.au 5 days at 20 24'C agitated All Rights Reserved. CrossRisk of Side effects* matching infectious needed?* agents?* No Low Haemoglobin (rare) transfusion related lung injury No Yea Incorrect use (highest leads to risk blood haemorrhage product) Page 31 of 51 Table - Products of donated blood 3.Plants and animals regulate the concentration of gases, water and waste products of metabolism in cells and in interstitial fluid Explain why the concentration of water in cells should be maintained within a narrow range for optimal function • Water makes up around 70-90% of living things; it is essential for life. • essential that the concentration of water in cells is kept constant as even small increases or decreases can lead to death. • Water solvent of all metabolic reactions in living cells, and sometimes directly takes part in it (eg. Respiration). • It is a solvent in which all metabolic reactions take place. • It is a transport medium for sugars, salts, hormones, wastes. • The concentration must be kept within a narrow range as the amount of water affects the concentration of solutes, which affects ability to diffuse in & out of cells. • Lack of water causes dehydration. • Blood pressure falls and circulation fails. • It can absorb and release large amounts of heat and requires a large amount of heat to vaporize, and therefore plays an important role in regulating temperature. • It maintains the shape of the cell membrane – too much water can cause a cell to burst and it cushions and protects body organs • The osmotic pressure of living tissue can also affect the pH in cells—for example, too little water leads to an increase in the concentration of solutes such as carbon dioxide and this in turn lowers pH. Both osmotic pressure and pH must be maintained within a narrow range so that enzymes can function under optimal conditions, to allow effective metabolism. RECALL: • Isotonic: Concentration of solutes outside the cell is the same as inside the cell. No overall movement of water. • Hypertonic: Concentration of solutes is greater outside the cell than inside. Water tends to move out of the cell. • Hypotonic: Concentration of solutes is greater inside the cell than out. Water tends to move inside the cell. • Living cells work best in an isotonic environment. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 32 of 51 Explain why the removal of wastes is essential for continued metabolic activity • Any accumulation of wastes may be toxic to cells and so metabolic wastes must be removed from the body to maintain homeostasis. • If wastes not continuously removed, their levels in the body will increase and alter the conditions in the internal environment. This in turn inhibits enzyme functioning and prevents cells from undergoing normal metabolic activity. • Examples are: ■ the build-up of nitrogenous wastes such as ammonia, which causes an increase in pH in cells, resulting in them becoming more alkaline, affecting enzyme activity ■ carbon dioxide accumulation, which lowers pH, resulting in the internal environment becoming more acidic. These changes to the acidity or alkalinity of cells slow down or inhibit enzyme functioning in metabolism. The accumulation of wastes that do not alter the pH may cause other problems—increased solute concentrations interfere with reaction rates and an osmotic imbalance adversely affects membrane functioning. • Urea - not as toxic as ammonia but can soon build up to toxic levels in the blood, poisoning the cells and retarding metabolism Identify the role of the kidney in the excretory system of fish and mammals • • primary role osmoregulation. This is the regulation of salt and water levels in the body The Kidney controls water balance, eliminate nitrogenous wastes, osmoregulation; regulate salt & water concentration and stabilises the internal environment by filtering the blood and reabsorbing required nutrients. The fish kidney • primary role of kidneys is osmoregulation—the regulation of the water and salt concentrations in the body. • In fish, excretion of nitrogenous waste products occurs across the gills. The kidneys adjust the levels of water and mineral ions in the fish’s body in order to maintain a constant concentration of internal fluid for the cells Freshwater fish • Bony fish living in fresh water maintain a higher concentration of solutes in their body than the concentration in the water outside (that is, they are hypertonic to their surroundings). • Water therefore tends to diff use into the body and so the fish need to continually get rid of the excess. • Their kidneys produce copious amounts of very dilute urine in an almost continuous stream in order to achieve this. • As fresh water has a lower concentration of ions than the fish do, the kidneys actively reabsorb salts to prevent their loss. Saltwater fish • Their internal body fluids are less concentrated than the surrounding water. • To avoid water loss from their body, marine fish keep drinking salt water. • They absorb the water and salts. • The water is retained and the salts actively excreted, some via the gills and some via the kidneys. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 33 of 51 • Saltwater bony fish excrete very little urine. The mammalian kidney • regulate the internal salt and water concentrations of the body, and excrete urea, the nitrogenous waste produced by mammals. • Mammals’ urine contains urea as well as water and salts. The kidneys ensure that the concentration of blood and interstitial fluid is constant Deamination • Proteins are made from amino acids. • made, used and broken down in cell metabolism. • Mammals unable to store amino acids, so any excess becomes nitrogenous waste to be removed. • These excess amino acids are transported to the liver, where they are broken down in a process called deamination. • This involves removing the part containing nitrogen to form urea. • The remainder is converted to a carbohydrate which may be stored (as glycogen) or used immediately. • Urea is transported by the blood to the kidneys and excreted in the urine. • The kidneys of mammals regulate the internal salt and water concentrations of the body, and excrete urea. Explain why the processes of diffusion and osmosis are inadequate in removing dissolved nitrogenous wastes inn some organisms Diffusion and osmosis require no energy input from cells and as a result they are slow processes. Diffusion requires there to be a difference in concentrations for it to take place. Therefore when the concentration of nitrogenous wastes within blood and urine are equalised, then no further waste would be removed from the blood. Active transport is therefore essential at this point to remove wastes from the blood Diffusion is non selective (random movement of molecules). It is passive (will not work against a concentration gradient). Osmosis is the movement of water only. Passive (will not work against a concentration gradient). It is the random movement of molecules. Distinguish between active and passive transport and relate these to processes occurring in the mammalian kidney Passive transport includes the process of diffusion and osmosis. These types of movement require no energy input from the cell because the molecules are moving along a concentration gradient from a region of high concentration to a region of low concentration. Example of passive transport in the mammalian kidney include: The excretion of excess water by osmosis • The excretion of nitrogenous wastes such as urea and ammonia by diffusion when the • concentration in the blood is higher than it is in the urine. Active transport requires the input of cellular energy to actively move molecules against a concentration gradient. This means that molecule can move from an area of low concentration to an hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 34 of 51 area of high concentration. Active transport mainly moves sodium ions, glucose, amino acids and hydrogen ions across the wall of the nephron. For example All glucose and amino acids are reabsorbed by the kidney so that they are not lost in the • urine Additional nitrogenous wastes and hydrogen ions are removed from the capillaries in the • kidney and added to urine Salts are actively transported from the urine back into the kidney cells. • o Removing salts from the urine and increasing their concentration in the bloodstream causes water to follow, but the movement of water is a passive form of transport • Reabsorption: The substances the body can reuse are reabsorbed into the capillaries surrounding the nephron. Eg, vitamins and hormones. This is active transport and requires energy. Some other substances passively re-enter the blood. Eg, water and salts. This occurs in the proximal and distal tubules and in the loop of Henle. • Secretion: This is the process where the body actively transports substances from the blood into the nephron. This is active transport. Explain how the processes of filtration and reabsorption in the mammalian nephron regulate body fluid composition The main processes that regulate body fluid composition and produce urine are filtrations and reabsorption. Filtration: • The renal artery that enters the kidney branches into numerous smaller and smaller vessels, each terminating in a globular network of capillaries - the glomerulus. • Filtration of the blood takes place at the surface between the glomerulus and the lining of each Bowman’s capsule. • Substances that are small enough (water, amino acids, glucose, salts/ ions and nitrogenous wastes) squeeze through the capillary wall and into the glomeruler filtrate of the Bowman’s capsule. • Filtration separates substances from the blood based on their size and does not take into account whether they are wastes that need to be excreted or if they are nutrients that are still required by the body. • Therefore glomeruler filtrate is not the final product. Its composition is further adjusted as it continues to flow along the nephron. • The nephron is the functional unit of the kidney. • They are found in the outer cortex & central medulla. • Blood flows into the nephron under high pressure. • Network of capillaries known as the glomerulus carries blood. • The thin walls of capillaries & high pressure cause all substances to leave the blood. • Filtration is non selective; all components are removed except erythrocytes & large proteins. Reabsorption: • Reabsorption of useful solutes from the glomeruler fluid takes place in the proximal convoluted tubule, the loop of Henle and the distal convoluted tubule. • In the proximal tubule all organic nutrients (amino acids and glucose) and some ions (sodium, potassium, calcium) are reabsorbed. • As the nutrients are actively reabsorbed, water follows them across by passive process of osmosis. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 35 of 51 • • • In the ascending loop of Henle and the distal tubule more ions are reabsorbed into the surrounding capillaries and water by osmosis follows before the final product urine is passed on via the collecting ducts to the ureters. Feedback mechanisms determine the quantities of substances reabsorbed. Substances re-enter through distal & proximal tubules, the loop of Henle & the collecting duct. All excess nutrients & wastes removed for excretion. Outline the role of the hormone aldosterone and ADH in the regulation of water and salt levels in blood What are hormones? Hormones are chemical control substances secreted by endocrine glands directly into the blood stream. They travel via the circulatory system, when they reach their target cells, the cells respond. In this case the cells are the kidney nephrons. Aldosterone - brings about salt retention • hormone produced and released from the adrenal gland situated above the kidneys. • The hormones stimulate the tubules to increase the active reabsorption of sodium ions against the concentration gradients from the tubules back into the blood of the capillaries surrounding the tubules. • This increases the solute concentration of the blood and hence stimulates the passive reabsorption of water via osmosis, from the tubules back into the blood. This ultimately corrects the blood pressure. • Release of aldosterone also stimulates the intestines to absorb more sodium ions which cause a decrease in potassium ion concentration. The release of aldosterone increases the blood pressure and concentration of urine • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • A decrease in the concentration of sodium ions in the bloodstream leads to a decrease in blood volume This stimulates the cells in the adrenal cortex (outer tissue of the adrenal glands which sit on top of each kidney) to produce and secrete aldosterone When aldosterone reaches the kidneys it increases the permeability of the nephron to sodium Reabsorption of sodium ions into the surrounding kidney tissue and capillaries occurs, resulting in retention of salt by the body That means that less salt is lost in urine. In the absence of aldosterone the salt concentration in urine is higher High Salt Levels: High blood volume and blood pressure due to water diffusing in. Levels of aldosterone decreased. Less salt reabsorbed, less water diffusing in Salt level decreased, blood volume and pressure decreases Low Salt Levels: Low blood volume and blood pressure due to water diffusing out. Levels of aldosterone increased. More salt reabsorbed, more water diffusing in Salt levels increase, blood volume and pressure increase hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 36 of 51 ADH (Anti-diuretic hormone) - brings about water reabsorption When a mammal becomes dehydrated the blood volume drops, this is detected by the • hypothalamus It stimulates the pituitary gland to release ADH • ADH increases the permeability of the distal tubules and collecting tubules in the nephron to • water Water is reabsorbed from these tubules into the kidney tissue and bloodstream • Water is conserved within the body • • High Salt Concentration: ADH levels increased collecting ducts and distal tubules become more permeable to water more water reabsorbed concentration returns to normal (Concentrated urine) • Low Salt Concentration: ADH levels increased collecting ducts and distal tubules less permeable less water absorbed concentration returns to stable state. (Dilute urine) Present information to outline the general use of hormone replacement therapy in people who cannot secrete aldosterone • • • • • • • • • • • Addison's disease a rare endocrine, or hormonal disorder that affects about 1 in 100,000 people. The disease is characterized by weight loss, muscle weakness, fatigue, low blood pressure, and sometimes darkening of the skin in both exposed and non-exposed parts of the body. Addison's disease occurs when the adrenal glands do not produce enough of the hormone cortisol and in some cases, the hormone aldosterone. For this reason, the disease is sometimes called chronic adrenal insufficiency. Cortisol is produced by the adrenal glands, located just above the kidneys. It belongs to a class of hormones called glucocorticoids, which affect almost every organ and tissue in the body. Cortisol's most important job is to help the body respond to stress. Among its other vital tasks, cortisol: helps maintain blood pressure and cardiovascular function; helps slow the immune system's inflammatory response; helps balance the effects of insulin in breaking down sugar for energy; and helps regulate the metabolism of proteins, carbohydrates, and fats. Aldosterone belongs to a class of hormones called mineralocorticoids, also produced by the adrenal glands. It helps maintain blood pressure and water and salt balance in the body by regulating the amount of sodium and potassium in the kidney. When aldosterone production falls too low, the kidneys are not able to regulate salt and water balance, causing blood volume and blood pressure to drop. Treatment of Addison's disease involves replacing, or substituting, the hormones that the adrenal glands are not making. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 37 of 51 • • • Cortisol is replaced orally with hydrocortisone tablets, a synthetic glucocorticoid, taken once or twice a day. If aldosterone is also deficient, it is replaced with oral doses of a mineralocorticoid, called fludrocortisone acetate (Florine), which is taken once a day. Without the therapy there will be incorrect salt levels in the body and dangerously high potassium levels which can cause high blood pressure, electrolytes imbalances and cardiac failures. Hence hormone replacement therapy is of great importance Gather, process and analyse information from secondary sources to compare the process of renal dialysis with the function of the kidney • People with dysfunctional kidneys are not able to remove wastes such as urea. They have to undergo renal dialysis to regulate their blood. • Dialysis means to separate. It simulates the role of the nephron in the kidney and separates molecules from the blood. • It prevents waste products of metabolism building up as high concentrations can lead to tiredness, weakness, loss of appetite. • It sustains the life of people with impaired kidney function. • Renal Dialysis removes wastes in blood by diffusion across a semipermeable membrane. • The blood is drawn out of a vein, into dialysing solution, which moves through plastic tubing into the machine. A bundle of semipermeable fibres that allow wastes to pass out into dialysing solution. The clean blood is then taken back into the blood stream. • The Kidney filters the entire blood volume once every ½ an hour. It is faster & more efficient than dialysis. • The two forms of dialysis are: Haemodialysis: The blood is extracted from the body from a vein and passed into a dialyser, which is a bundle of hollow fibres made of a partially permeable membrane The dialyser is in a solution of dialysing fluid, which has similar ion concentrations of blood The dialyser only allows wastes to pass through, and not blood cells and proteins. In this way it is similar to the filtrations stage of the nephron The wastes diffuse into the solution, and it is constantly replaced The anti-clotting agent, heparin, is also added to prevent clotting The blood is then returned to the body Peritoneal Dialysis: This occurs in the body Dialysis solution is introduced into the peritoneal (abdominal) cavity through a catheter The lining of the peritoneal cavity is a natural semi-permeable membrane and has its own rich blood supply The wastes diffuse into the solution, which is replaced. (IN BIO PRAC BOOK) hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 38 of 51 Analyse information from secondary sources to compare and explain the differences in urine concentration of terrestrial mammals, marine fish and freshwater fish Organism Environment Urine Concentration Marine Fish Internal salt concentration is lower than surroundings, therefore; Water moves out of the fish by • osmosis • Kidneys reabsorb water, while excreting salts To reduce water loss • constantly drink saltwater and excrete salt from gills Produce small amounts of highly concentrated urine Reason: Problem of osmosis. Concentration of ions lower in the body than in the water. Water diffuses out, salts diffuse in. Excess salts excreted through gills, little urine excreted. Large amounts of water drank to replace it. Freshwater Fish Internal salt concentration is higher than surroundings, therefore; Water moves into fish by • osmosis while diffusing out salt Kidneys absorb salts from • surrounding water through gills • Removes excess water. They also rarely drink water Excrete large amounts of dilute urine Reason: Concentration of dissolved ions higher in the body, water diffuses in. Must remove excess water through large quantities of dilute urine. Terrestrial Mammals Variable conditions. Kidneys must respond to changes in environment; Water loss through lungs and • skin Gain water by drinking water • and food • Regulates concentration of blood, while at the same time excretes urea and conserves water. Mammals, generally excrete urine that is more concentrated than body fluids to reduce water loss. Concentration changes with the availability of water, as well as temperature and water loss through sweat. Water levels in blood rise, urine amount rises, and concentration decreases and vice versa. Reason: Problem of conserving water while removing nitrogenous waste. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 39 of 51 Use available evidence to explain the relationship between the conservation of water and the production and excretion of concentrated nitrogenous wastes in a range of Australian insects and terrestrial mammals Ammonia: • Highly toxic. o Removed immediately. • Product of most aquatic animals. • Immediate product produced from the breakdown of amino acids. • Highly soluble in water. o Requires large quantities of water to be safely removed. Urea: • 10,000 times less toxic than ammonia. • Can be stored in body fluid for a limited time. • Produced by mammals, sharks, amphibians. • Highly soluble in water. o Small amounts of water required to remove it. Produced from the breakdown of amino acids. • • Major source of water loss in mammals. Uric Acid: • < toxic than urea & ammonia. • Stored in the body for extended time. • Product of terrestrial animals. o Birds, reptiles, insects. • Highly insoluble in water. o Minimal water required to remove it. Spinifex hopping mouse Terrestrial Urine in concentrated form. Arid environment. Drinks little H2O. Wallaroo Terrestrial Concentrated urine. Efficient excretory system. Recycles N & urea to make concentrated urea. Survives in an arid environment. Insects Terrestrial Uric acid. Insects covered in a cuticle impervious to H2O. Conserve H2O by producing a dry paste of uric acid. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 40 of 51 Type of nitrogenous waste and conservation of water Australian Insects Insect 1 Grasshopper Insect 2 Aquatic insect Mammal 1 human Mammal 2 Kangaroo Low High Low Low Availability of water in the environment • Nitrogenous waste • • Toxicity • Energy required for • • production • • Amount of water lost through excretion Dilute/ concentra ted urine and explanation why Identify organs of hscintheholidays.com.au Australian Terrestrial Mammals uric acid Low toxicity Large energy required • Ammonia • Urea • High • • No energy Toxic, but ammonia so 10 000 can be stored times less in the body toxic than for longer ammonia, • More energy so it can to produce be safely than stored in ammonia, the body less than uric for a acid limited time • More energy to produce than ammonia, less than uric acid • Minimal • Large amounts • Concentrated • Dilute (has to be due to the toxicity of ammonia) • Malphigian • Malphigian • Minimal • Concentrated • Urea • Not as toxic as • Minimal • Concentrated All Rights Reserved. urine and dry faeces to conserve water as water availability is often low • Liver- Page 41 of 51 • Kidney’s- excretion and outline their functioning • tubules: increases the surface area for the transport of wastes into the digestive/ excret ory tracts Rectumtransports most solutes back into the blood, followed by water • tubules: increases the surface area for the transport of wastes Rectumtransports most solutes back into the blood, followed by water • multipurp ose organ which include functions of 1) making bile, 2) detoxifies blood, 3) destroys red blood cells, 4) makes urea from excess amino acids. Kidney’smaintain the balance of salts and water in the body and so has a vital role in homeost asis 2. Ureter carries urine to bladder 3. Urinary Bladder stores urine 4. Urethra carries urine outside the body hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 42 of 51 • • maintain the balance of salts and water in the body and so has a vital role in homeostasi s Bladdercollects urine excreted by the kidney before disposal by urination Urethratube that carries fluids (urine) out of the body Background information • • • • All animals must eliminate nitrogen-containing metabolic wastes that arise from the breakdown of protein so that they do not accumulate in toxic amounts. Excess amino acids (and nucleic acids) in the bodies of vertebrates are de-aminated and the nitrogen-containing amino group is removed and combined with carbon dioxide to produce ammonia. The ammonia is still fairly toxic and so it must be excreted directly, diluted with large quantities of water, or it may be changed to a less toxic form of nitrogenous waste. (Just as carbon dioxide changes the pH of solutions to become more acidic, so ammonia makes the pH more alkaline—thus changing the internal environment from its optimal range and affecting enzyme functioning and metabolism.) Urea and uric acid are less toxic forms of nitrogenous wastes which can be excreted in a less dilute form. The formation of all nitrogenous wastes occurs in the liver and they are then carried to the kidneys for excretion. Nitrogenous wastes and water conservation • • • • • • • • • The environment in which an organism lives determines how important the conservation of water is for the survival of that organism. In environments where water is scarce, for example some arid terrestrial habitats, natural selection has favoured the survival of those organisms that secrete less toxic forms of nitrogenous wastes, because they are able to conserve more water while still flushing out their wastes. Ammonia is very toxic compared with other nitrogenous wastes. It requires no energy to be made, but must be excreted immediately and in a dilute form with a great deal of water. It is therefore most commonly secreted by aquatic invertebrates and fish that live in fresh water, where the availability of water is not a limiting factor. Urea is the most common form of nitrogenous waste excreted by terrestrial mammals, adult amphibians and some fish. It is not as toxic as ammonia and so it can be excreted in a less dilute form, resulting in less water loss. It does, however, require more energy for its production. Uric acid is the least toxic form of nitrogenous waste and so it is excreted (as a semi-solid, whitish paste) by animals that have a particular need to conserve as much water as possible, for example birds and most invertebrates, including insects. The synthesis of uric acid uses a large amount of energy in contrast to ammonia and urea, although it has the smallest amount of water loss in the process of excretion. The excretion of uric acid, which is not very soluble in water, allows animals such as insects to conserve water within the body, as its low toxicity means it can be excreted with minimal water loss. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 43 of 51 Excretion of nitrogenous wastes in insects • • • • • • • • Insects have blind-ending kidney tubules (Malpighian tubules) that open directly into the hind part of the digestive tract Water and waste solutes are drawn into the blind end from the fluid in the body cavity of the insect. The open end of each kidney tubule empties into the hindgut of the digestive tract. In some insects (e.g. the blowfl y) the blind-ending kidney tubules lie close to the end of their digestive tracts and the solutes in the tubules draw water by osmosis across the epithelium (lining) of the rectum, in this way modifying their excretory fluid so that most water is reabsorbed from their rectal contents into the body. As a result, they produce very dry faeces (which contain nitrogenous wastes as well as undigested food). Some insects such as the desert silverfish and the larval forms (meal worms) of a particular moth (Tenebrio molitor) are able to absorb water vapour from the air through the mouth or anus. Water that enters the anus of the meal worm is absorbed through the rectum and is then drawn into the adjacent kidney tubules by osmosis. These are simple forms of tubular reabsorption, more primitive versions of that in mammals that need to conserve water. Conclusion • • The challenge of regulating water content during excretion is therefore solved by varying the type of nitrogenous waste excreted, which in turn determines whether urine needs to be dilute (to safely flush out more toxic forms of waste), or if it can be more concentrated (to flush out less toxic forms). This affects the physiology of the animal: the amount of water that must be reabsorbed into the body or the amount that can be lost in urine depends on the type of nitrogenous waste excreted, as well as the concentration of salts that are being excreted. All of these factors contribute to determining the eventual concentration of urine that is excreted. Process and analyse information from secondary sources and use available evidence to discuss processes used by different plants for salt regulation in saline environments Grey Mangroves: - Salt Exclusion: Special glands in the mangroves can actively exclude the salt from the water, so that the water absorbed has a lower salt concentration than the water in the environment. - Salt Accumulation: Salt is accumulated in old leaves that drop off, so that thesalt is out of the plant’s system - Salt Excretion: Salt can be excreted from the underside of the leaves of the mangrove plants. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 44 of 51 Halophytes: • Plants adapted to live in a salty environment. - Able to tolerate higher levels of salt than other organisms. - Have mechanisms to control the levels of salt. Mechanisms: • • • Salt barriers. - Tissues in roots & lower stems stop salt from entering the plant, but allow water to enter. Secretion. - Able to concentrate salt & secrete it through glands on the leaves; where it is washed off. Salt deposits. - Salt deposited in old tissue which is disregarded. Eg. - Grey mangrove secretes salt. - Salt marsh plants use salt deposits. Salt regulation in plants in saline environments Background information • • • • • Salt, even in relatively small concentrations in soil water, has a damaging effect on cell ultrastructure and cellular metabolism. Plants that are adapted to saline environments are called halophytes. The plants use either salt tolerance (salt accumulation) or salt avoidance (salt exclusion) as strategies to survive in environments where they are exposed to high salt concentrations. Salt tolerant plants (e.g. sea grass and mangroves) are able to maintain metabolic functioning even though their cells accumulate sodium and chloride ions. They minimise salt toxicity by increasing their water content in large vacuoles. Salt avoidant plants (salt excluders) minimise the salt concentrations of cells through structural and physiological adaptations such as stopping salt from entering at the roots. Examples of halophytes • • • • Saltbush (Atriplex vesicaria) is an excluder— Actively transports excess sodium and chloride ions into bladder cells situated on the tip of hairs on the surface of leaves When the bladder cell reaches capacity it bursts, releasing the salts into the environment. Palmer’s grass (Distichlis palmeri) also actively secretes salts from specialised cells to avoid high salt concentration within the cells. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 45 of 51 • • Succulents minimise the salt toxicity through increasing water content in large vacuoles, where the accumulation of excess salt is balanced with additional water drawn into the cells. Pickleweed (Salicornia) uses this method and also actively transports salts from the cytoplasm by a sodium—potassium pump on the vacuole membrane. Pigface (Carpobrotus glaucescens), a succulent that grows on coastal sand dunes, tolerates salt by increasing water uptake to dilute the salt. It also stores excess salt in a location away from sensitive cells. Define enantiostasis as the maintenance of metabolic and physiological functions in response to variations in the environment and discuss its importance to estuarine organisms in maintaining appropriate salt concentrations. • Some organisms live in environments where they experience extreme fluctuations in conditions. • To survive, these plants and animals have evolved adaptations that allow them to cope physiologically with these fluctuations, a survival mechanism called enantiostasis. • Enantiostasis is the maintenance of metabolic and physiological functions in response to variations in the environment. • The survival of species that live in an environment such as an estuary, where salt and water concentrations fluctuate broadly on a daily basis, depends on their ability to either avoid these changes or to tolerate them. • Organisms that move freely between the sea and rivers experience similar fluctuations in environmental conditions, and they too have developed mechanisms of avoidance or tolerance. • Enantiostasis is not limited to fluctuations in salt levels. For example, extreme changes in environmental pressure are experienced by diving birds and so these animals must also rely on enantiostasis for their survival. Estuarine organisms— maintaining a water and salt balance In estuaries, where a river meets the sea, and freshwater mixed with saltwater, the daily change in tides affects the salinity of the environment in the following ways: ■ At high tide, sea water flows into the river mouth, creating an environment with a higher salt concentration (a higher osmotic pressure) than the cytoplasm of cells and body fluids in organisms. This salt water has the tendency to draw water out of cells by osmosis. ■ At low tide, sea water flows out of the river mouth and fresh water flows into the estuary. Plants and animals in the estuary which are subjected to this predominantly fresh water environment with a high water potential face the challenge of water tending to move into living tissue. Osmoregulation in organisms inhabiting an estuary is a challenge— they need to maintain normal metabolic functioning, despite these enormous fl uctuations within the environment. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 46 of 51 Living organisms employ one of two strategies in enantiostasis: 1.Osmoconformers • Organisms that allow their body’s osmotic pressure to vary with the environment. • Don’t maintain homeostasis. • Concentrations of internal fluids remain isotonic to external fluids. • Vary the concentration of solutes within cells to maintain functioning. • are organisms that tolerate the changes in the environment by altering the concentration of their internal solutes to match the external environment (their body fluids ‘conform’ to that of the environment). • Their metabolism is able to tolerate changes in salinity in their own body fluids and cells. • Eg. Sharks are osmoconformers. They are euryhaline; meaning they can tolerate changes in salt concentration. 2. Osmoregulators • Maintain homeostasis regardless of the concentration of the external environment. • are organisms that avoid changes in their internal environment and have the ability to keep the solutes at an optimal level (‘regulate’ solute concentrations within the body), regardless of the differing external environment. • These organisms are unable to tolerate a range of salt concentrations in their body fluids and cells and so they have mechanisms to exclude salt to keep the internal fluid concentration constant, despite fluctuations in the environment. • Eg. Freshwater & marine fish regulate their internal environment to maintain homeostasis • However, as the salt concentration of body fluids in an osmoconformer changes, various body functions are affected, such as the activity of enzymes. For normal functioning to be maintained, another body function must be changed in a way that compensates for the change in enzyme activity. • One example of enantiostasis is when a change in salt concentration in the body fluid, which reduces the efficiency of an enzyme, is compensated for by a change in pH, which increases the efficiency of the same enzyme. Describe adaptations of a range of terrestrial Australian plants that assist in minimising water loss Problems facing plants that minimise water loss • • • • • main form of water loss in plants is by means of transpiration— evaporation of water from the stomata of leaves. Transpiration serves two main functions—it lifts water and dissolved ions up the stem to the top of plants in a continuous transpiration stream and it is a form of evaporative cooling, a process that is essential in regulating temperature in plants. Those plants that live in areas where water is in limited supply must achieve a balance between how much water the plant can afford to lose for cooling purposes and the risk of dehydration. Xerophytes are plants that live in arid conditions and possess adaptations that equip them to achieve this balance and survive in their hostile environment. Leaves of plants contain stomata and so they are the organs where most transpiration in plants occurs. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 47 of 51 • Stomata are stimulated to open in the presence of light and/ or excess heat in well hydrated pants, leading to a loss of water by the process of transpiration. • About 98% of water loss from plants occurs as a result of transpiration. • The advantage of the opening of stomata is to allow evaporative cooling and to allow carbon dioxide to enter the leaves for photosynthesis. The disadvantage is that it exposes plants to the risk of dehydration. • Most of Australia is hot and dry, so water (like soil nutrients) becomes a limited resource for plants, available in short supply or only in sporadic bursts. • Stomata close in response to darkness, dehydration and a lack of carbon dioxide. • Three main problems face plants with regard to minimising water loss: 1. If plants lose too much water through transpiration they run the risk of dehydrating, yet loss of water by this evaporative cooling mechanism is an essential part of temperature regulation to keep plant cells within the optimal temperature range for metabolic functioning. 2. If plants reduce the surface area of their leaves or lose their leaves, the number of stomata exposed to the external environment may be reduced, but the reduced exposure of photosynthetic surface area to sunlight may be inadequate for photosynthesis to occur. 3. If plants retain their leaves, but develop ways of ensuring that stomata do not open, gaseous exchange between the leaf and the surrounding air becomes limited and, as a result, may not allow sufficient carbon dioxide into the plant—a necessary requirement for photosynthesis. Adaptations in Australian plants to minimise water loss • • • • Many plants that live in arid conditions display complex xerophytic adaptations, features which have evolved and allow these plants to minimise water loss while maintaining functions such as cooling of the plant and photosynthesis. Most of these adaptations are evident as modifications of leaves, but other organs may also show modifications. Stems and leaf stalks (petioles) have sparsely distributed stomata, but are green and thus have adequate photosynthetic tissue. This can be used to advantage in allowing xerophytes with reduced leaves to carry out other essential functions to survive in their arid habitat. Xerophytes, such as some Australian plants, live in hot, dry habitats where they are exposed to bright sunlight. They minimise water loss in four main ways, as outlined below. Reducing the internal temperature • • Some plants have developed structural features or physiological mechanisms other than transpiration to reduce their internal temperature, allowing the plants to use less water for evaporative cooling, but still keep their temperature within the correct range for metabolism. For example, their leaves may be coated in a shiny waxy cuticle or they may have white hairs to refl ect sunlight. Australian examples • • • • The saltbush has waxy leaves that reflect heat and light. Eucalypts and banksias have coarse, leathery leaves with a thick cuticle to protect them from the excessive sunlight by giving some insulation and reducing the small amount of evaporation that sometimes occurs through thinner leaf cuticles. Plants with these tough, dry leaves are known as sclerophylls (Greek: sclero—hard and phyllo—leaf). In addition, both of these features ensure that all the epidermal cells are waterproof, preventing loss of water by evaporation from these surface cells to the outside. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 48 of 51 Reducing the exposure of transpiring plant structures to sunlight Plant organs that have the most abundant stomata (leaves and leaf-like organs such as flower petals) have the greatest rates of transpiration. Some plants reduce the exposure of these organs (and their stomata) to light by: ■ changing the orientation of leaves so that stomata are not exposed to direct light (and so they do not open) ■ reducing the surface area of organs that have the highest proportion of stomata ■ the complete loss of transpiring plant organs (for example, leaves or leaf-like parts of the plant such as flowers). (These plants need to have some additional adaptations to prevent overheating, increase their photosynthetic tissue or ensure pollination, as a result of their loss leaf or petal surface area.) Australian examples ■ Reduced leaves • Plants like Hakea and Acacias (wattles) also have leaves that have become reduced in size, where each leaf is divided into pinna or leaflets. • Some plants have their leaves reduced to tiny brown bracts or scales and their photosynthetic function is taken over by other parts of the plant, for example cladodes (photosynthetic stems) and phyllodes (photosynthetic leaf stalks). • The photosynthetic stems or stalks that take over the function of the leaves have very few stomata and therefore the amount of water lost by transpiration is reduced, while the photosynthetic surface area is still sufficient. • Many phyllodes and cladodes have the added features of hairs and/ or sunken stomata. • Cladodes are common features of Australian she-oaks (casuarinas).The green, needle-like structures that resemble leaves are in fact modified stems. • These needles have tiny light-coloured markings at regular intervals along their length. • Closer examination (for example, with a hand lens) reveals that these light areas are actually rings of tiny brown scale leaves, a feature to reduce the surface area of leaves and therefore their exposure to the sun • Phyllodes, common to Acacia species (Australian mulga, for example Acacia Aneura), are broad, fl at leaf-shaped leaf stalks (petioles) that take over the function of leaves. These are common in Acacia species and the tiny, brown scale at the tip of each phyllode is all that remains of the reduced leaf. ■ Reduced size of fl owers or having no petals can also reduce the amount of water a plant requires; for example, the Acacia has small clustered fl owers, reducing the energy and water required to needed to produce them. (Petals are considered to be modifi ed leaves, so reducing the size of fl owers or loss of petals also reduces evaporation of water from their surfaces.) ■ Shedding leaves is another way of reducing the water lost by leaves, for example the river gum. ■ Orientation of leaves on the stem is another feature of plants to prevent overheating is the orientation of leaves on the stem. • eucalypts have an adaptation that helps them to survive—their leaves hang in a vertical position to reduce the surface area that is exposed to the sun during the heat of the noonday sun. • This serves an additional function—that of minimising water loss because the stomata are not directly exposed to sunlight during the hottest part of the day and will close. • Eucalypts therefore regulate the times of stomatal opening and closing— during the cooler early morning and late afternoon, stomata are open for photosynthesis, but when the temperatures increase to a level that causes water stress to the plant the Stomata then close. hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 49 of 51 Reducing the difference in water concentration between the plant and the outside air • • • • The difference in water concentration (or water potential) between the plant and the surrounding atmosphere determines how much water is lost by transpiration. On a hot, dry day, the water concentration in the air is much lower than that in the internal tissues of the leaf and so more water is lost by transpiration than on a cooler or more humid day. Since plants cannot change the overall external environment, many have adaptations that allow them to create their own smaller ‘microclimate’ in the air immediately surrounding each leaf. Structures such as hairy leaves or rolled leaves trap water in the immediate vicinity and in this way they keep air around the plant humid by preventing the moist air being swept away by dry air currents and they also create a barrier to evaporation. Australian examples • • • • • Sunken stomata or stomatal pits occur in Hakea and in the cladodes of sheoaks. The actual stoma (breathing pores) are lower than the main surface of the leaf and this allows moist air to be trapped in the pit, therefore reducing the difference in water potential immediately outside the stoma (in the pit) and inside the leaf. Epidermal hairs trap a moist layer of air, resulting in a smaller difference between the concentration of water in the leaf tissue and the water vapour in the layer of air trapped by the hairs—for example, hairs on the under-surface of leaves of the coastal banksia. Curled or rolled leaves, such as those of porcupine grass (Miscanthus sinensis), enclose a microclimate of humid air to reduce the difference in water potential (see Fig. 3.16b). These adaptations allow plants to keep their stomata open for a longer period of time, as there is not as much water being lost and so gaseous exchange for photosynthesis can occur freely. Water storage • • • • Some plants, called succulents, have adaptations such as fleshy stems or leaves which are able to swell up and retain moisture when it is available; they then survive by using this moisture during dry periods. Australia has some succulent species, including the desert plant Calandrinia (parakeelya), an important food for Aboriginal people (the leaves provide an excellent source of moisture in desert environments and were eaten as a green salad leaf). Fruits are structures that are removed from plants so that the seeds that they contain can be dispersed. Many Australian plants produce woody fruits rather than fleshy fruits, as this reduces the amount of water lost from the plant when the fruits fall off. The adaptations aim to: - Increase water taken in by the roots. - Decrease water lost through evaporation. - Extensive underground root systems - Close stomata when temperature reaches a certain threshold - Hard leaves with a thick waxy cuticle - Shiny leaves to reflect sunlight - Hairy leaves to reduce evaporation - Small leaves or false, photosynthesising leaves - Thick bark - Reduces airflow over the surface, decreasing evaporation hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 50 of 51 - Reduced leaves & branchlets, false leaves performing photosynthesis - Extra thickening of cell walls throughout branches - Prevents wilting even when large quantities of water are lost Adaptations of Australian xerophyte (plants adapted to dry conditions) include; Hard leathery, needle-shaped leaves with reduced surface areas such as in Hakea sericea • (needlebush) and costal tea trees Use of phyllodes for photosynthesis rather than leaves that would lose water by • transpiration, as in many acacias Some salt bushes e.g. Atriplex, change the reflectiveness of their leaves during leaf • development so that they have highly reflective leaves during summer Eucalypts avoid high radiation in the middle of the day by hanging their leaves vertically to • present less surface area to sun Heat loss is greater for small leaves or highly dissected leaves than it is for larger leaves and • many Acacias have fronds of bipinnate leaves Waxy cuticle prevents evaporation in many Eucalypts • Perform a first-hand investigation to gather information about structures in plants that assist in the conservation of water Aim: to gather information from plant specimens about structures that assist in the conservation of water Method 1. Gather different species of australian terrestrial plants 2. Using a disecting microscope or hand lense, observe the presence of scale leaves 3. Using a compound microscope, observe the positin of stomata in the cross section of a leaf Results: Characteristic How it reduces water loss Plant example Waxy cuticle Acts as a waterproof seal over the surface of the leaf to prevent evaporation from the epidermal cells Banksia Reduced leaves (scales) Tiny leaves have a smaller surface area: volume ratio and fewer stomata exposed to the sun; therefore less water is lost by evaporation casuarina Leaves hanging vertically Less surface area exposed to sun in the hottest part of the day, so stomata only open during early morning and evening when it is cooler, leading to less transpiration Eucalyptus (In bio prac) hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 51 of 51 Biology - maintaining a balance 1. Most organisms are active within a limited temperature range: Identify the role of enzymes in metabolism, describe their chemical composition and use a simple model to describe their specificity in substrates Metabolism - all the chemical processes occurring within cells. Two types: • synthesis of materials (anabolism- ants build up) e.g. photosynthesis • breaking down of materials (catabolism- cats break down) e.g. respiration Role of enzymes in metabolism: Enzymes are biological catalysts that accelerate chemical reactions without change in temperature. It does this by lowering activation energy needed through specificity. They are substrate-specific, acting on only one specific substrate due to shape of active site. Enzyme shape not altered and can be re-used. Enzymes are central to maintaining functioning, as without them, metabolism too slow to support life Chemical composition of enzymes: Protein molecules composed of long chains of amino acids folded into a specific 3dimensional globular shape. CHON(S)- carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and sometimes sulphur Models to explain specificity: 1. Enzymes are substrate-specific 2. Substrate and enzyme bind together at the active site = chemical reaction The Lock and Key Model • Substrate fits exactly into active site forming a complex, like a key into a lock • Assumes that the enzyme’s active site had a rigid shape. © (2012) All Rights Reserved 1 of 20 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au The Induced Fit Model (more recent) • Active site slightly changes its shape to accommodate the substrate perfectly • Assumes enzymes are not rigid Identify the pH as a way of describing the acidity of a substance pH is a measure of hydrogen ion (H+) concentration which are released by acids, and is therefore a way of describing acidity (greater H+, greater acidity). pH scale runs from 0 to 14: 1) a pH of 7 is neutral - neither acidic nor alkaline. 2) a pH of less than 7 is acidic. Smaller number = more acidic 3) a pH of more than 7 is alkaline, or basic. Larger number = more alkaline Explain why the maintenance of a constant internal environment is important for metabolic efficiency So that enzymes can function effectively and metabolic efficiency can be maintained Need a constant level of these variables: • Temperature: Enzymes function within a narrow (optimum) range of temperatures. Variations decrease enzyme activity. Too hot - enzymes change shape and denature (active site won’t fit substrate). Too cold water in cells freeze, causing cell to rupture • pH: Levels outside the optimum alter shape of enzyme = denature • Concentration of metabolites (reactants e.g. oxygen): An absence of reactants may slow down or stop chemical reactions • Water and salt concentration (osmotic balance): all chemical reactions take place in water, water concentration must be constant. • An absence of toxins: CO2, heavy metals (mercury) and other wastes may be toxic to cells, affecting enzyme activity. E.g. mercury blocking active sites, CO2 altering pH of fluid Describe homeostasis as the process by which organisms maintain a relatively stable internal environment Homeostasis is the maintenance of a relatively stable internal environment, despite fluctuations in external environment. This is important for metabolic activity. Organisms have feedback mechanisms to keep constant temperature and concentration of chemical substances. These variables have an ideal value called a set point- homeostasis does not maintain the exact set point, but keeps within tolerance limits Explain that homeostasis consists of two stages: Detecting changes from the stable state & counteracting changes from the stable state © (2012) All Rights Reserved 2 of 20 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au Homeostasis consists of two stages: • • Detecting Changes in conditions from stable state- receptors detect stimuli that indicate a change in the body’s internal or external environment. Counteracting Changes to return conditions to stable – effector organs carry out response Outline the role of the nervous system in detecting and responding to environmental changes the major mechanism of homeostasis is called negative feedback The role of the nervous system: rapid co-ordination of internal organ systems during negative feedback • The nervous system is made up of: • the CNS (brain and spinal cord) which acts as a control centre to coordinate responses • the peripheral NS - the sensory and effector nerves that branch throughout the body, acting as communication channels to and from the CNS • Co-ordination: • Sensory cells called receptors detect stimuli • A message of this info is transmitted to CNS via sensory nerves as impulses • Neuron nerves in CNS process and analyse message, and then transmits a response to effector organs via motor nerves • This counter-acts the change The role of the nervous system in thermoregulation in mammals • • Thermoreceptors in the hypothalamus of the brain, monitor the temperature of the blood as it circulates through the brain. The hypothalamus is also the control centre for temperature regulation and sends messages to effectors to cool the body down and warm the body up Warming the body– effectors conserve/generate heat • Raised hairs on the body – by hair erector cells creates an insulating layer that traps heat lost from radiation, convection and conduction • Vasoconstriction – contracting of blood vessels to let less blood near the skin surface (heat is carried in blood) • Shivering – heat is generated by rapid small muscle movement • Increased Metabolism – thyroid gland increases metabolism, creating more heat © (2012) All Rights Reserved 3 of 20 Cooling the body – effectors lose heat • Vasodilatation – expansion of the blood vessels to let more blood near the skin surface so that heat can be lost from radiation, convection and conduction • Sweating –Liquid sweat is secreted through pores of skin. Heat is removed as it evaporates • Decreased Metabolism – thyroid gland lowers metabolism, generating less heat For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au • • Hair remains flatdecreases insulating layer of hair Resting- less heat is made by muscles Identify the broad range of temperatures over which life is found compared with the narrow limits for individual species • • • • • • there are organisms that are able to live in almost all temperatures on earth, ranging from -70°C (at poles- arctic fox) to 56°C (in desertscamel) this is broad, compared to the narrow temperature range for individual species (only function at an optimal range of temperatures) –Called there tolerance range Platypus: -8°C to 34°C Sydney blue gum: -1°C to 34°C Coral reefs: 23°C-25°C Life is found in a broad range of temp, but individual species only found in a narrow temp range Identify some responses of plants to temperature change Plants need certain temperatures for growth and germination of seeds Response to high temperatures: • Wilting: Reduces SA exposed to the sun E.g. roses, hydrangeas • Leaf Orientation: change the orientation of their leaves, so that leaves hang down vertically. This reduces the SA exposed to the sun, reducing heat absorption e.g. eucalypts • Leaf fall: Drop some of their leaves during hot seasons to reduce SA. This decreases heat absorption E.g. eucalypt • Reseeding in response to extremes: Plants may die above ground, but leave behind dormant seeds e.g. eucalypt releases seeds from canopy, banksias Response to cold conditions: • Organic ‘Anti-Freeze’- some in arctic regions produce organic compounds that reduce the temperature at which the cytoplasm freezes, preventing the plant from freezing and dying e.g. Antarctic hairgrass • Dormancy- deciduous trees lose their leaves in winter and undergo a period of dormancy, e.g. deciduous beech E.G. Alpine Groundsel: • Survives cold temperatures by being a short plant that is buried by snow, protecting plant from extreme cold • Stems and leaves desiccate to reduce damage to cells if water freezes © (2012) All Rights Reserved 4 of 20 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au • • Has a hairy layer on leaves and stems to reduce freezing Buds warm up quickly to grow and reproduce quickly in good condition Ectotherm e.g. fish, amphibians, reptiles, plants Use heat energy from environment to regulate body temp. Body temp tends to fluctuate with ambient temp e.g. Netted dragon (desert lizard): Behavioural - In low temps, it lies in the sun to absorb heat energy. In high temps, it retreats to the shade of rocks or to its burrow and reduce its activity to avoid overheating. Hunts at night when cool e.g. diamond-backed python • Structural – black colouration allows it to survive cold e.g. thorny devil (lizard) • Physiological - In heat, skin becomes lighter in colour so that it can reflect heat off itself Endotherm e.g. mammals and birds Use internal sources such as metabolism to regulate body temp. Body temp tends to remain stable. e.g. Red Kangaroo • Physiological- In hot conditions, it vasodilates - licks the inside of its paws, where skin is thinner, and blood supply is closer to surface. Evaporation from saliva promotes the loss of heat from the blood. • Cold >> insulating layer of fur e.g. Fairy Penguin Structural : feathers trap an insulating layer of air • In cold conditions, feathers are lifted away from skin, increasing insulation layer of air • In hot conditions, feathers lie flat against skin, reducing insulation layer of air • Behavioural- in hot conditions, they move into water to cool down. In cold conditions, they huddle close together to reduce the surface of skin exposed to cold Compare responses of named Australian ectothermic and endothermic organisms to changes in the ambient temperature (environment temp) and explain how these responses assist in temperature regulation 2. Plants and animals transport dissolved nutrients and gases in a fluid medium: Identify the forms in which each of the following is carried in mammalian blood: Carbon Dioxide, Oxygen, Water, Salts, Lipids, Nitrogenous wastes, Other products of digestion © (2012) All Rights Reserved 5 of 20 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au Substance From To Form Oxygen Lungs Oxyhaemoglobin Carbon Dioxide Body cells- waste product of resp. Body cells – for resp. Lungs Nitrogenous Waste Liver and body cellsproduced from breakdown of proteins Excretory organsKidneys Mostly as urea, but also ammonia, uric acid and creatinine Water Digestive system and body cells Body cells Water molecules Plasma Salts Digestive system and body cells Body cells Dissolved ions Plasma Lipids Digestive system Bloodstream Plasma Other products of digestion Digestive system and liver Body cells Glycerol, fatty acids and lipid droplets As separate molecules eg sugars as glucose, proteins as amino acids Mainly hydrogen carbonate ions Explain the adaptive advantage of haemoglobin Haemoglobin is an iron-containing protein found in RBC. Its advantages are: • It increases the oxygen-carrying capacity of blood by 60 times. Organisms without haemoglobin carry oxygen by blood plasma (90% water). O2 is not very soluble in water and therefore cannot be carried effectively dissolved in blood plasma. Organisms with haemoglobin have a considerable advantage, as O2 is needed for respiration to produce energy • Its capacity to release O2 increases when CO2 is present. It is important for haemoglobin to release O2 freely in cells where the O2 concentration is low. These cells release CO2 from resp. which lowers the pH. Haemoglobin has a reduced affinity to O2 in lower pH levels, so easily releases O2. • Its ability to bind O2 increases once the first molecule binds to it, increasing rate of oxygen take up Compare the structure of arteries, capillaries and veins in relation to their function • • • © Arteries and veins carry blood long distances from one organ to another Capillaries form branching networks that surround all tissue cells, bringing blood into close contact with cells for exchange Each is structured for their purpose (2012) All Rights Reserved 6 of 20 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au Carried by RBC RBC and plasma Plasma plasma Direction of flow Arteries Capillaries Veins Away from the heart Small vessels that surround all tissue cells, bringing blood into close contact with cells for exchange Towards the heart Oxygenated / deoxygenated Oxygenated (redder) Except for the pulmonary artery, which goes to lungs from the heart Structure The walls are made up of 3 layers; endothelium as a lining, smooth muscle to contract the vessel, and connective tissue to allow for expansion. Wall layers (particularly smooth muscle) are thicker and muscular than veins to withstand pressure They link arteries and veins Depends on whether receiving it from arteries or veins Walls consist only an endothelium, one cells think, for easy diffusion Are microscopic vessels Small lumen to force red blood cells through in single file, slowing down their flow and increasing their exposed SA for gaseous exchange Wall layers are thinner and less elastic than arteries – less pressure More elastic to expand when there is an increased volume of blood Fatty deposits on endothelium Valves (folds in endothelium) How blood moves Smooth muscle changes diameter of lumen for vasoconstriction and vasodilatation No High pressure- pumped from the heart Deoxygenated (darker) Except for pulmonary vein which goes to heart from lungs The walls are made up of 3 layers; endothelium as a lining, smooth muscle to contract the vessel and connective tissue to allow for expansion Wider lumen for easy blood flow Valves (see down) No Depends on whether receiving it from arteries or veins Has valves and surrounding muscle to prevent backflow of blood, as it is under small heart pressure Low pressure – muscular movement and valves Analyse information from secondary sources to identify current technologies that allow measurement of oxygen saturation and carbon dioxide © (2012) All Rights Reserved 7 of 20 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au concentrations in blood and describe and explain the conditions under which these technologies are used Pulse Oximeter • Used extensively in hospitals • Positive >>> Non-invasive (indirect)– a probe with a sensor is attached to the patient’s finger or earlobe • Measures oxygen saturation of blood by shining red and infrared light through the finger. The amount of light absorbed by the probe is determined by oxygen saturation levels of haemoglobin, hence showing oxygen levels in the blood • Used to quickly detect problems with oxygenation and gives indication to the nature of breathing and circulation • Can also continuously monitor oxygen saturation of patients under anesthesia or with severe heart or breathing problems (e.g. after a heart attack) • Also measures pulse rate Arterial Blood Gas (ABG) Analysis • Invasive- takes blood sample from an artery – only carried out if abnormalities are found in oximeter readings • Oxygen levels, CO2 levels and pH (hydrogen ions) and bicarbonate ions are measured directly in a Blood Gas Analyser machine • It is carried out to assess respiratory diseases such as emphysema and pneumonia, and to manage patients receiving oxygen therapy Describe the main changes in the chemical composition of the blood as it moves around the body and identify tissues in which these changes occur • The circulatory system in mammals transports substances (such as gases, nutrients, wastes and hormones) throughout the body in the blood The circulation of blood into and out of the heart On every circuit of the body, blood passes through the heart twice • body -> heart - > lungs - > heart - > body • The mammalian body consists of four chambers: the right and left atriums and the right and left ventricles. The blood circulates through two systems: The pulmonary system – heart to lungs to heart (CO2 and O2) • • • © (2012) All Rights Reserved 8 of 20 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au • The Systemic system – heart to body (except lungs) to heart (nutrients, wastes, hormones) • Deoxygenated blood enters the heart from the body via the systemic veins into the right atrium, which flows into right ventricle and is then pushed out via the pulmonary arteries to the lungs. After gaseous exchange in lungs, the now oxygenated blood returns to the heart in the left atrium by the pulmonary vein, flows into left ventricle and leaves by the systematic arteries to circulate the body • Chemical composition of blood as it moves around the body Increase in O2 and decrease in CO2 Tissues in which these changes occur Lung tissue • External gaseous exchange has occurred Decrease in O2 and increase in CO2 General body tissues where cellular respiration has occurred, brain • Internal gaseous exchange Increase in digestive end products – amino acids, glucose and fatty acids Decrease in digestive end products and increase in nitrogenous wastes (urea) Small intestinal tissue Increase in water, salts and vitamins Large intestinal tissue Decrease in nitrogenous wastes (urea) and excess water and salts Kidney tissue • Excretory organ Increase in hormones are secreted directly into bloodstream Endocrine tissue Liver tissue • Centre of food metabolism Outline the need for oxygen in living cells and explain why removal of carbon dioxide from cells is essential Need for oxygen: • Oxygen is needed for cellular respiration • This is carried out by all cells to release energy in the form of ATP, necessary for metabolism (e.g. growth, repair and reproduction) Need to remove carbon dioxide: • CO2 is a waste product and its accumulation can be toxic to cells because it lowers the pH of cells and bloodstream • This affects enzyme function Analyse information from secondary sources to identify the products extracted from donated blood and discuss the uses of these products © (2012) All Rights Reserved 9 of 20 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au Product Use Example Red Blood Cells To increase oxygen-carrying capacity of blood Platelets Essential for blood clotting Plasma Also essential for blood clotting Immunoglobins Essential for fighting infections People who have anaemia, or who have suffered heavy blood loss Patients who have cancer of the blood e.g. leukaemia People with clotting disorders e.g. haemophilia People whose immune systems are not working due to diseases such as AIDS Analyse and present information from secondary sources to report on progress in the production of artificial blood and use available evidence to propose reasons why such research is needed Progress of research: • Currently, artificial blood has been designed to carry oxygen (replacing the function of haemoglobin in RBC) • Oxygen carriers being developed are: • Perflurocarbons – synthetic materials that can dissolve 50 times more oxygen than blood plasma; they are cheap to produce and there is no risk of the material being infected by diseases. However, there is much difficulty in getting this to combine with blood • Haemoglobin-based oxygen carriers – made from modifying haemoglobin extracted from RBC. They do not require cross matching of blood. However, they have a short circulation time Why research is still needed: Limitations of donated blood: • The shelf life of donated blood, even under refrigeration, is short (35 days) • There are not enough donations being made • There is the risk that transmission of infectious diseases may occur • Cross-matching of blood is required, limit of blood for some blood groups Limitations of current artificial blood: • Haemoglobin based products have a short circulation time of 20-30hrs in the body • Blood products do not mimic the bloods ability to fight disease and clot • Perflurocarbons have difficulties in combining with other substances in the blood stream Advantages of artificial blood: • Free of infectious agents • Do not need refrigeration for storage and can be kept for 2-3 years • Universal acceptance of all blood groups © (2012) All Rights Reserved 10 of 20 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au Describe current theories about processes responsible for the movement of materials through plants in xylem and phloem tissue Xylem (dead) is a continuous tube that passively transports water and dissolved minerals from roots to leaves for photosynthesis by physical processes Theory: The Transpiration Stream theory (cohesion-adhesion-tension): 1. Cohesion – water molecules stick together, forming a continuous stream of water molecules from leaves to roots 2. Transpiration – water is evaporated from stomata’s in leaves, creating a pull at the upper end of the water stream. This pulls the stream of molecules continuously along 3. Adhesion – when the pull stops, water sticks to the sides of the xylem tube and doesn’t fall down. 4. Tension/ capillarity – water moves up the xylem like a wire, as due to cohesion and adhesion in a thin tube column of water does not break, maintaining a continuous pull Phloem actively transports products of photosynthesis (particularly sugars) to all parts of the plant for respiration or storage in a process called translocation. It is alive so that is can produce energy to transport flow. Transport is bidirectional. Theory: Pressure Flow theory (source-path-sink) • Flow is driven by an osmotic pressure gradient between source and sink • Source- Sugars are actively loaded into the sieve tube at leaves via companion cells. • This raises osmotic pressure (low WC), drawing water into phloem passively from surrounding cells through osmosis • Path- The pressure created by the water causes materials to actively flow to the sink. Water can move into phloem by osmosis at any point and sugar can continue to be actively loaded • Sink - sugars are actively removed from the phloem, drawing water with them so the flow mechanism can continue. This results in a low osmotic pressure (high WC) at sink. 3. Plants and animals regulate the concentration of gases, water and waste products of metabolism in cells and in interstitial fluid: Explain why the concentration of water in cells should be maintained within a narrow range for optimal function Water: • Determines pH–Too little water leads to increase in solute concentrations such as CO2, which lowers pH, affecting enzyme function and metabolism © (2012) All Rights Reserved www.hscintheholidays.com.au 11 of 20 For more info, go to • • • • Provides structural support in cells – correct water concentrations maintain the osmotic pressure of cells, which is responsible for structural support, esp. in plants. Provides medium for metabolic reactions– chemical reactions in cells proceed only if the reactants are dissolved in water. Too much water may dilute reactants and too little may stop reactants from dissolving in water Too much water in cells- may cause cell to ‘burst’ Too little water- may cause the cell to dehydrate and shrink Explain why the removal of wastes is essential for continued metabolic activity Accumulation of wastes can be toxic to cells, as they alter the conditions of the internal environment such as pH, affecting enzyme functioning and metabolism. E.g. CO2 lowers pH. Nitrogenous wastes increase pH. The excretory system is responsible for removing metabolic wastes. THE KIDNEY!!! - Renal Kidneys- the main organ of osmoregulation and the excretion of nitrogenous wastes Osmoregulation- maintaining water and salt balance in the body • The kidneys role in excretion is to filter the blood that enters it, removing wastes from the bloodstream so that the can be excreted • Filtration is carried out by millions of units called nephrons Structure of a nephron - Pelvis : collects urine from medulla • Cortex: the outer zone of the kidney where filtration occurs • Medulla: the inner zone of the kidney. Also where filtration occurs. • Ureter: tube that takes urine from kidney to bladder • Renal Artery: takes blood into the kidney to be filtered. • Renal Vein takes filtered blood out of the kidney back into the circulatory system. • Bladder: stores urine to be excreted Kidney Path: oxygenated blood arrives at kidney through the renal artery. It is filtered to form urine. The kidney is drained of its fluid via two vessels: © (2012) All Rights Reserved 12 of 20 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au 1. The renal vein- takes filtered blood out of the kidney back into the circulatory system. 2. The ureter- tube that takes urine from kidney to bladder The kidneys role in osmoregulation: control the amount of water lost in urine, depending on the environment in which the organism lives Identify the role of the kidney in the excretory system of fish and mammals In fish and mammals, the kidneys play a role in both excretion and osmoregulation. Water potential- the tendency to lose water by osmosis when water concentration is higher outside body than in Fresh-water Fish • • • • • • • • • • • • Marine Fish Environment: water is freely available Water tends to accumulate in tissues as a result of osmosis • • • • • Risk of having too much water. Therefore: Urinate REGULARLY Conserve salt Excrete excess water DILUTE URINE Excrete nitrogenous wastes (as ammonia- very toxic) ◦ Kidneys are structurally suited to this role by having a large glomeruli for the filtration of blood in large volumes Kidneys are not involved in salt balance- any excess salt is removed via gills © (2012) All Rights Reserved www.hscintheholidays.com.au • • • • • • • Mammals Environment: salty Tend to lose water by osmosis into salty surroundings Excess salts tend to accumulate, by diffusion Risk of having too much salt. Therefore: Urinate LESS Conserve water Excrete excess salts CONCENTRATED URINE Excrete nitrogenous wastes (as urea- less toxic) ◦ Kidneys have a small glomeruli for the filtration of blood in small volumes Have mechanisms for excreting excess salt • • • • • 13 of 20 For more info, go to Environ ment: varies Tend to lose water as sweat in hot weather, but not as much in cold weather Conseq uently, kidneys have a complex control mechani sm to ensure a balance between amounts of sweat and urine excreted URINE VARIES IN CONCE NTRATI ON AND VOLUM E, dependi • • • ng on the need to conserv e or excrete water In hot weather (such as desert mammal s) water must be conserv ed. Therefor e less urine, more concentr ated In cold weather water must be excreted . Therefor e more urine, more dilute Excrete nitrogen ous wastes (as urealess toxic) Compare and explain the differences in urine concentration of terrestrial mammals, marine fish and freshwater fish Animal Urine Concentration Reason For Difference Terrestrial animal Concentration and volume varies • In hot weather (such as desert mammals), less urine, more concentrated • In cold weather, more urine, more dilute Environment: varies • Tend to lose water as sweat in hot weather, but not as much in cold weather • In hot weather (such as desert mammals) water must be conserved. Therefore less urine, more concentrated • In cold weather water must © (2012) All Rights Reserved 14 of 20 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au be excreted. Therefore more urine, more dilute Freshwater Fish Marine Fish Large quantities of very dilute urinesmall amounts of salts and large amounts of water. • Small quantities of highly concentrated urine. • • • • Environment: water is freely available Water tends to accumulate in tissues as a result of osmosis Environment: salty Tend to lose water by osmosis into salty surroundings Excess salts tend to accumulate, by diffusion Explain why the processes of diffusion and osmosis are inadequate in removing dissolved nitrogenous wastes in some organisms Diffusion and osmosis rely on differences in concentration gradient (high to low) between two solutions and so both stop once the concentration gradient reaches equilibrium. No energy. Problems with diffusion: • Rate of movement is too slow - toxic nitrogenous wastes accumulate, changing pH of cells • Not all wastes can be removed - diffusion only moves substances from a high to a low concentration and so it stop once the concentration gradient reaches equilibrium, allowing for the accumulation of wastes, changing pH. • Active transport is required to move wastes against concentration gradient Problems with Osmosis: • Too much water lost in urine- water will be drawn into urine by osmosis to dilute wastes and equalize the concentration of the urine and surrounding kidney tissue, causing major water loss • Too little water loss- organisms that live in freshwater tend to accumulate water in their bodies by osmosis. Whilst this dilutes wastes, it does not assist the organism to excrete wastes, due to the equilibrium of concentration gradients Goodness of combined active transport and osmosis: • Active transport (energy) is quicker and more effective than diffusion, as it moves wastes even against a concentration gradient and kidney can actively reabsorb useful materials such as salts, drawing water with it by osmosis, to ensure that the water balance is not upset Distinguish between active and passive transport and relate these to processes occurring in the mammalian kidney • Passive transport requires no energy input from a cell, as molecules move from a high to low concentration along a concentration gradient. Includes diffusion and osmosis: © (2012) All Rights Reserved www.hscintheholidays.com.au 15 of 20 For more info, go to • • • Diffusion is the movement of any molecules from a H to a L concentration Osmosis is the movement of water molecules from a H to a L concentration Active transport requires an energy input from a cell, as molecules move from a L to a H concentration, against the concentration gradient Kidney: • • • • • • In the kidney, substances move between the bloodstream and excretory fluid in the nephrons by both active and passive transport In nephrons there is a two-way movement of substances: Waste substances pass from bloodstream into nephrons to be excreted in urine Substances required by the body are removed from urine in nephrons before excretion and returned to the bloodstream Passive transport moves water by osmosis and nitrogenous wastes by diffusion in kidneys Active transport moves salts, glucose, amino acids and hydrogen ions into nephron. Additional nitrogenous wastes and hydrogen ions are actively added to urine Explain how the processes of filtration and re-absorption in the mammalian nephron regulate body fluid composition Nephron: the functional unit of the kidney. There are millions in each kidney, responsible for filtering the blood and either re-absorbing or secreting substances as urine for homeostasis. A fluid travels along the nephron, with various substances added or removed to produce the end product- urine. The three main processes that lead to urine formation in nephron are: 1. filtration 2. reabsorption 3. secretion Filtration © (2012) All Rights Reserved 16 of 20 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au Glomerulus – small bundle of capillaries surrounded by the Bowman’s capsule in the kidney Bowman’s capsule – a double-wall capsule surrounding the glomerulus of a nephron • • • • • • Filtration takes place at the surface between the glomerulus and the Bowman’s capsule Blood pressure forces substances within the blood that are small enough through the walls of the glomeruli capillaries into the Bowman’s capsule Includes large volumes of water carrying dissolved substances such as amino acids, glucose, salts, nitrogenous wastes and other toxic molecules Blood cells and proteins remain in blood The process of filtration separates substances from the blood based on their size, not whether they are nutrients that are still required in the body. This fluid in the nephron now is called glomerular filtrate Reabsorption As glomerular filtrate contains molecules that the body needs, certain solutes are selectively reabsorbed into blood capillaries at various points along the nephron. NOTE: amount of water and ions reabsorbed according to body needs • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Proximal Tubule: All organic nutrients (amino acids and glucose), some vitamins and some water and ions (such as sodium) are reabsorbed Move by diffusion until concentrations are equal. Then active transport Loop of Henle: In descending limb, walls are permeable to water = water is reabsorbed by osmosis In ascending limb, walls are permeable to salts = large numbers of sodium ions are actively reabsorbed- but no water reabsorption Distal tubule: Selective reabsorption of sodium ions by active transport, according to body needs Collecting duct: This is the end of the nephron, and connects to the ureters The walls are permeable to water only, and water is reabsorbed by osmosis according to body needs The final filtrate is called urine. It has a high concentration of urea. Water: is reabsorbed in all parts of nephron, except ascending loop of henle. Most water moves by osmosis, however active transport may also be involved when forming fluid is very concentrated Urea is not reabsorbed, despite the difference in concentration between the forming fluid and the blood. Energy is used to ensure that urea does not return to the blood. © (2012) All Rights Reserved www.hscintheholidays.com.au 17 of 20 For more info, go to Secretion • • • the active secretion of toxic substances from capillaries into the nephron Proximal tubule: Hydrogen ions and drugs (aspirin and penicillin) are secreted by active transport Descending loop of henle: urea is secreted mainly by diffusion Outline the role of the hormones, aldosterone and ADH (anti-diuretic hormone) in the regulation of water and salt levels in the blood Hormones: chemical control substances secreted by endocrine glands directly into the bloodstream The hormones aldosterone and ADH: • change the permeability of membranes of cells in the nephron • maintains homeostasis by regulating the amount of salt and water reabsorbed Aldosterone: • secreted by adrenal gland • Conserves salts by increasing the permeability of the nephron to sodium, allowing salts to be reabsorbed • Urine = dilute ADH: • • • Secreted by pituitary gland Conserves water by increasing the permeability of the nephron to water, allowing water to be reabsorbed Urine = concentrated Present info to outline the general use of hormone replacement therapy in people who cannot secrete Aldosterone • • • Used for patients suffering low levels of the hormone Aldosterone e.g. Addison’s disease Restores the balance of hormones, by giving patients the hormone This increases salt conservation, raises blood pressure and reduces danger of heart failure Gather, process and analyse information from secondary sources to compare the process of renal dialysis with the function of the kidney • • © If a person suffers from kidney failure, there is no natural means to remove wastes Renal dialysis carries out the function of failed kidneys so blood may be filtered (2012) All Rights Reserved 18 of 20 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au Kidney Function Renal Dialysis Natural body process Artificial process to replace damaged kidneys Performed by two fist sized organs Performed by a large machine attached to a computer Performed intermittently - (2-3 times a week, for 3-4 hours each time.) Concentrations of blood monitored by computers so that most wastes are removed during treatment Wastes removed by diffusion Removes wastes continuously Varies output automatically, depending on concentrations of wastes in blood Wastes removed by both diffusion and active transport Removes all wastes Some reabsorption Sodium, potassium and phosphate not removed by diffusion No reabsorption Use available evidence to explain the relationship between the conservation of water and the production of excretion of concentrated nitrogenous wastes in Australian insects and mammals Insects (grasshopper, ant) • Need to conserve water • Therefore excrete nitrogenous wastes in the form of uric acid (least toxic form), which requires almost no water for excretion Terrestrial Mammals • Terrestrial animals excrete urea (more toxic than uric acid) which requires more water • To conserve water, the mammalian kidney is adapted to change the concentration of urine, depending on the body’s needs • Eg the red kangaroo has kidneys that produce highly concentrated urine. Define enantiostasis as the maintenance of metabolic and physiological functions in response to variations in the environment and discuss its importance to estuarine organisms in maintaining appropriate salt concentrations Enantiostasis is the maintenance of metabolic and physiologic functions in response to variations in the environment. It is a survival mechanism found in many organisms who live in environments that fluctuate e.g. estuarine organisms Estuary – area where freshwater meets saltwater. Salinity varies considerably depending on factors such as tides and rainfall Organisms employ one of two strategies in Enantiostasis: • Osmoconformers – tolerate changes by altering their internal salt concentration to match their external environment, so that they do not lose water and salts through diffusion and osmosis. © (2012) All Rights Reserved www.hscintheholidays.com.au 19 of 20 For more info, go to • E.g. Fiddler crabs and sharks • Osmoregulators –regulate internal salt concentrations despite external fluctuations, through changing the concentration of their urine. E.g. mussels and salmon • Describe adaptations of a range of terrestrial Australian plants that assist in minimising water loss Xerophytes are plants adapted to arid conditions. They have adaptations to conserve water. • • • Having an extensive root system to obtain as much water underground as possible. Eg mulga / spinifex grass Reducing internal temperature to reduce the need for evaporative cooling. E.g. Saltbush has waxy leaves to reflect light and heat Reducing the exposure of transpiring structures to sunlight so water lost through transpiration is reduced. E.g. Wattles have small leaves with a small SA/V ratio. Eucalypts orientate leaves into vertical position during the hottest parts of the day, reducing the SA exposed to the sun and subsequent evaporation from leaves Discuss processes used by different plants for salt regulation in saline environments In plants, salt can have a damaging effect on metabolism. • • • © Salt excretion –Saltbush secrete salt onto leaves, which rain then washes off Salt exclusion – salt excluder’s prevent the entry of salt into their root systems via the filtration system in its roots and lower stems. Eg mangroves can exclude 95% of salt. Salt accumulation – these minimize salt toxicity by increasing water content in large vacuoles where salt accumulates e.g. Pickleweed Pigface stores excess salt away from sensitive cells (2012) All Rights Reserved 20 of 20 For more info, go to www.hscintheholidays.com.au Maintaining a Balance 1. Most organisms are active in a limited temperature range 1.1 Identify the role of enzymes in metabolism, describe their chemical composition and use a simple model to describe their specificity on substrates Enzymes – act as biological catalysts, controlling the rate of each step of chemical reactions Metabolism – sum of all chemical reactions occurring in a cell Every reaction and process (metabolism) in a cell is controlled by a specific enzyme Chemical composition – globular proteins Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen Log chains of sequences of amino acids been forced into specific shape Simple model Lock-and key model – shape of enzyme and shape of active site fit together forming an enzyme – substrate complex Induced fit – active site slightly more flexible then keyhole, able to slightly alter shape to fit more closely Factor affecting enzyme activity – amount of substrate -temperature -pH Process – 1. Substrate binds to active site on enzyme 2. Chemical reaction occurs, substrate bond broken 3. Product is released, enzyme returns to original form 1.2 identify data sources, plan and choose equipment or resources and perform a first – hand investigation to test the effect of: -Increased temperature -Change in pH -Change in substrate concentrations on the activity of named enzymes 1. two water baths with one temperature 38, and the other room temperature 2. Add milk and rennin to 2 test tubes, one in each 3. 2 water baths, one pH 4, one pH 9 4. Both rennin/Milk test tubes in the 38 water bath 5. Time each mixture to estimate how long it takes to react HSC Biology - Maintaining a Balance summaries 2012 hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 1 of 17 Results: temp – 38 with milk, coagulated 18, no effect pH – acidic milk coagulated alkaline milk didn’t change 1.3 Identify the pH as a way of describing the acidity of a substance pH is a way of describing acidity or alkalinity of a substrate. 1-6 = acidic 7 neutral 8-14 alkali/base 1.4 Explain why the maintenance of a constant internal environment is important for optimal metabolic efficiency Enzymes control metabolic efficiency and require specific conditions i.e. temperature and pH level. If these levels aren’t optimum temperature, they will not work as efficiently, or not at all. Hence, life will cease. 1.5 Describe homeostasis as the process by which organisms maintain a relatively stable internal environment Homeostasis = maintenance of relatively stable internal environment Conditions controlled by homeostasis = body temperature, pH, water concentration, salt concentration, sugar levels, levels of dissolved gases- oxygen and carbon dioxide 1.6 Explain that homeostasis consists of two stages - Detecting changes from the stable state - Counteracting changes from the stable state Two stages – Detecting change – sensory cells detect change in temp and/or chemical comp Counteracting change – effector organs work to reverse change Changes from stable state detected by receptors 1.7 Outline the role of the nervous system in detecting and responding to environmental changes Central nervous system = brain & spinal cord Peripheral nervous system = sensory nerves and effector nerves Stimulus response pathway: Receptor nerves detect change – sensory neuron conducts nerve impulse to brain then nerve impulses pass info from receptor to effector neurons to courter act change HSC Biology - Maintaining a Balance summaries 2012 hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 2 of 17 Stimulus receptor central nervous system effector response This pathway allows for the central nervous system to respond to environmental changes 1.8 gather, process and analyse information from secondary sources and use available evidence to develop a model of a feedback mechanism [insert diagram here] 1.9 Identify the broad range of temperatures over which life is found compared with the narrow limits for individual species Broad range = most organisms found between -2ᵒC and 40ᵒC however some have been found at the poles at temperature of below - 70ᵒC and black ocean trenches above 200ᵒC Narrow range – most individual species have a narrow limited temperature range e.g. silky oak found in alpine regions only can withstand 0ᵒC to 38ᵒC 1.10 Compare responses of named Australian ectothermic and endothermic organisms to changes in the ambient temperature and explain how these responses assist temperature regulation Endothermic = rely on internal sources such as metabolic activity Ectothermic = heat from environment/external sources 1.11 Ectothermic – Magnetic termites – pack walls of moulds with insulting wood pulp and align their moulds north-south to maximise exposure o sun in morning and evenings Antarctic ice fish – produces anti- freeze to prevent the formation of ice Endothermic – Red kangaroo – licks inside of paws where skin is thinner and blood supply closer relying on evaporation to loose heat from blood Bent wing bat – produces brown fat which can be quickly absorbed during cold temperatures Identify some responses of plants to temperature change Vernalisation = need to be exposed to cold before can flower After fire/heat plants may die but leave new seeds to re-sprout Becomes much colder = beach tree, leaves drop in winter -> reduce growth, less energy needed to avoid damage. Daffodil, plants die back leaving no parts above ground ->protected underground to survive winter and will sprout when conditions are favourable HSC Biology - Maintaining a Balance summaries 2012 hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 3 of 17 Becomes hotter = geraniums, produces smaller leaves and reduce surface area -> higher temp lead to increased transpiration causing plants to die out. Hakea, extreme heat of fire causes seed dispersal -> gives seeds a chance to grow 1.12 analyse information from secondary sources to describe adaptations and responses of Australian organisms that assist temperature regulation Blue tongue lizard = ectothermic - bask in sun to gain heat and will hide in burrows to preserve temperature. Possum = endotherm –fur helps insulate in cold and possums living in Tasmania have thicker fur for temperature adaptation 2. Plants and animals transport dissolved nutrients and gases in a fluid medium 2.1 Identify the form(s) in which each of the following is carried in mammalian blood: Carbon dioxide Oxygen Water Salts Lipids Nitrogenous waste Other products of digestion Carbon dioxide: Travels in various forms. 7% dissolved in plasma. 23% combines with haemoglobin forming carbaminchahaemoglobin, 70% forms hydrogen carbonate ions and travels in plasma. Oxygen: combines with haemoglobin to form oxyhaemoglobin in red blood cells. Water: travels in plasma Salt: positive or negative dissolved ions in plasma Lipids: many are water- insoluble and only travel in blood when coated with proteins becoming lipoproteins. Travel as high or low density. Nitrogenous wastes: ammonia which is toxic so converts to urea. Dissolved in plasma. Other products of digestion: amino acids, glucose, vitamins etc., are generally soluble and dissolve in plasma. 2.2 Explain the adaptive advantage of haemoglobin Haemoglobin is a protein made up of four polypeptide chains. Oxygen is not soluble in water, and so cannot be carried efficiently dissolved in blood plasma Gives blood red colour and allows blood to carry oxygen HSC Biology - Maintaining a Balance summaries 2012 hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 4 of 17 2.3 Adaptive advantage: Increase the oxygen-carrying capacity of blood. Ability to bind oxygen increases once the first oxygen molecule binds to it because bonding to oxygen makes haemoglobin change its shape. Capacity to release oxygen increases when carbon dioxide is present. Compare the structure of arteries, capillaries and veins in relation to their function Arteries - “Highway”: transport oxygenated blood (except pulmonary artery) away from heart under high pressure. Due to high pressure, walls must be thick, elastic to withstand pressure. Three layers, connective tissue to allow for expansion, muscle and elastic fibres to contract vessel and endothelium as lining Veins – “Drain back to heart”: transport deoxygenated blood back to the heart, contains valves to prevent back flow Carry same quantity of blood as arteries but not as high pressure. Same layers, but not as thick Capillaries – “Thread through cells”: link Arteries to veins. Walls only single cell in thickness, no elastic or muscular fibres Site of gaseous exchange, diffusion of materials through walls to reach cells in tissues. HSC Biology - Maintaining a Balance summaries 2012 hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 5 of 17 2.4 Describe the main changes in the chemical composition of the blood as it moves around the body and identify tissues in which these changes occur Location Lungs Chemical Co2 O2 Villi in small intestine Amino acids and glucose Glucose Liver Kidneys H2O and nitrogenous wastes Glands Hormones 2.5 Why? CO2 diffuses into lungs Decreases as diffuses out of alveoli into lungs Decreases in concentration as they diffuse from small intestines If there is too much glucose in the bloodstream, it will increase. If there’s not enough, it will increase. Stored as glycogen Kidneys can remove or allow for water to be reabsorbed into the blood stream. Osmoregulation maintains constant water balance Concentration of urea increases in kidneys as it’s filtered from blood and accumulated to be excreted. Endocrine glands secrete hormones directly to blood, travels till reaches target cell/tissue Perform a first-hand investigation to demonstrate the effect of dissolved carbon dioxide on the pH of water Aim: to observe the effect of pH of CO2 in water Apparatus: straw, beaker, universal indicator paper, pH chart, water Risk assessment: do not breathe water in Method: 1. In a 400mL beaker, add 200mL water 2. Add pH paper, observe colour 3. Exhale through straw, into the water for 5 mins Results: the indicator paper went more yellow to indicate a lower pH Conclusion: a high concentration of CO2 in blood will cause the blood to become more acidic. HSC Biology - Maintaining a Balance summaries 2012 hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 6 of 17 2.6 Perform a first-hand investigation using the light microscope and prepared slides to gather information to estimate the size of red and white blood cells and drew scaled diagrams of each. Equipment light microscope small transparent ruler, prepared slide Method: 1. Set up microscope and switch on unbuilt lamp 2. Place small transparent ruler on the stage and focus using the low power objective 3. Use the scale on the ruler to calculate the field of view using the low power objective and use these dimensions to calculate the field of view under high power 4. Place the prepared slide of blood on stage and focus using the low power objective 5. Use the established size of field to calculate the size of cells Risk assessment Carry microscope with one hand on base and other on neck, if dropped may cause damage to exposed feet and body Red blood cell – no nucleus – approx. 8nm White blood cell – nucleus – approx. 16 nm 1 cm = 10 microns 2.7 Outline the need for oxygen in living cells and explain why removal of carbon dioxide from cells is essential Need for oxygen : All living organisms use respiration to release energy to maintain life’s processes All organisms that aerobically respire require oxygen to survive Glucose + oxygen carbon dioxide + water + energy Why carbon dioxide must be removed: CO2 produced as waste product. Accumulation of carbon dioxide causes a drop in pH, making blood acidic and impairs metabolic reactions and action of enzymes Thus essential to maintain homeostasis HSC Biology - Maintaining a Balance summaries 2012 hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 7 of 17 2.8 Analyse information from secondary sources to identify current technology’s that allow measurement of oxygen saturation and carbon dioxide concentrations in blood and describe and explain the conditions under which these technologies are used Current technology to measure oxygen saturation Pulse oximetry – measures oxygen saturation. It is a non-invasive probe attached to patients finger or earlobe to monitor % of haemoglobin saturated with oxygen Uses different amount of absorption of two wavelengths of light to produce graph of flow rate Used in many situations, very important for measuring oxygenation and pulse rates during operations using anaesthesia and during recovery phase Less accurate if patient is suffering from vasoconstriction Current technology to measure carbon dioxide concentrations Capnometer – incorporates infra-red detector assembly. Used to measure carbon dioxide and monitor air exchange in lungs of patients on ventilators or under anaesthesia. Evaluates Respitory condition of spontaneously breathing patients 2.9 analyse information from secondary sources to identify the products extracted from donated blood and discuss the uses of these products Product extracted Plasma proteins From plasma or blood cells? Plasma Red blood cells Platelets Blood cells Blood cells Granulocytes Blood cells 2.10 Use Burns, volume expansion as albumins contribute to osmotic balance, transport lipids Anaemia, transport oxygen Severe bleeding. Contain factors that control blood clotting Low neutrophil count. Involved in defence against disease Analyse and present information from secondary sources to report on progress in the production of artificial blood and use available evidence to propose reasons why such research is needed. Artificial blood is ‘man-made’ products that fulfil some functions of biological blood Reasons: Amount of blood needed for transfusions rising each year, faster than amount being donated Blood bank contaminations from HIV/AIDS, hep-C, Creuzfeldt-Jakobs disease Emergency situations, rapid need for treatment without determining blood type Donated blood shelf life limited HSC Biology - Maintaining a Balance summaries 2012 hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 8 of 17 PolyHeme is a haemoglobin based oxygen therapeutic blood substitute. vt Advantages: no safety concerns Reduce contamination risk e.g. HIV/AIDS Stored longer Immediate full capacity oxygen transport Disadvantages: replaces only one function of blood, oxygen transport Development of PolyHeme important step in research, trials saved lives. 2.11 Describe the current theories about processes responsible for the movement of materials through plants in xylem and phloem tissue Vascular tissue consists of xylem which conducts water and mineral ions up the plant form roots to leaves, and phloem which translocates the products of photosynthesis and other organic products both up and down the plant. 2.12 Process of movement of materials in xylem tissue Movement of water and mineral ions up the plant. Water enters root by osmosis and transpiration pull draws water up the stem Cohesion between water molecules causes water to form continuous stream up the plant and ‘pulls’ water up. Adhesion between water molecules and xylem vessels also help to draw water up Choose equpiment or resources to perform a first-hand investigation to gather first-hand data to draw transverse and longitudinal sections of phloem and xylem tissue [Insert diagram] HSC Biology - Maintaining a Balance summaries 2012 hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 9 of 17 3. Plants and animals regulate the concentration of gases, water and waste products of metabolism in cells and in interstitial fluid 3.1 Explain why the concentration of water in cells should be maintained within a narrow range for optimal function Cell metabolism controlled by enzymes, each enzyme requires specific conditions for optimal efficiency e.g. specific pH, temp, ion concentration Water in cells determines the osmotic pressure of cells Change in concentration of water may interfere with function of enzymes and metabolism disrupted 3.2 Explain why the removal of wastes is essential for continued metabolic activity Main metabolic wastes = carbon dioxide, excess salts and water and nitrogenous wastes Accumulation of wastes may inhibit enzyme functioning and prevent cells from undergoing normal metabolic functioning. E.g. high levels of ammonia will kill cells and excess water will change concentrations affecting enzyme activity Accumulation of wastes may also interfere with reaction rates and an osmotic imbalance adversely affecting membrane functioning 3.3 Identify the role of the kidney in the excretory system of fish and mammals Filtration, absorption, secretion Filtration: this is a continuous cycle in the renal corpuscles. Reabsorption: in the kidneys is defined as the movement of substances out of the renal tubules back into the blood capillaries located around the tubules Secretion: occurs when substances move into the distal and collecting tubules from the blood of capillaries around them. The kidney however has other subtle functions which include: Releasing hormones Control blood pressure Help produce red blood cells Produce vitamin D which helps the bone remain strong and healthy HSC Biology - Maintaining a Balance summaries 2012 hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 10 of 17 Feature Kidney Mammal An excretory organ that filters blood and removes nitrogenous wastes Saltwater fish An excretory organ that filters blood and removes nitrogenous wastes Freshwater fish An excretory organ that filters blood and removes nitrogenous wastes Structure Many nephrons Filtration High blood pressure in glomerulus forces ultrafiltration Depends upon water intake Simple structure with few small glomeruli Love filtration rate Simple structure with many large glomeruli High filtration rate Small quantity Large very dilute Urine produced 3.4 Explain why the processes of diffusion and osmosis are inadequate in removing dissolved nitrogenous wastes in some organisms Passive processes and will not occur unless sufficient gradient is present Processes can also be very slow Large, active, multicellular animals quickly accumulate toxic levels of nitrogenous wastes and thus need other mechanisms 3.5 Distinguish between active and passive transport and relate these to processes occurring in the mammalian kidney Active transport Requires an input of energy for the movement across a cell membrane Passive transport Does NOT require energy for movement across a cell membrane e.g. diffusion and osmosis In kidney: Both active and passive transport occurs Pressure in glomerulus causes water, ions and small molecules to filter into bowman’s capsule Reabsorption of glucose, amino acids and inorganic salts occurs by active transport As these solutes move out of the nephric filtrate, water follows by osmosis Active transport of sodium causes more osmosis and salt and water levels are thus adjusted to maintain homeostasis Passive transport: once filtration occurs in bowman’s capsule, water returns via interstitial fluid from tubules to capillary in process of osmosis HSC Biology - Maintaining a Balance summaries 2012 hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 11 of 17 3.6 Explain how the process of filtration and reabsorption in the mammalian nephron regulate body fluid composition Ultrafiltration: occurs when high blood pressure in glomerulus forces water, ions and small molecules into Bowman’s capsule Reabsorption: components that are needed by body are then selectively reabsorbed into blood stream by tubules By controlling reabsorption in the blood stream, the salt and water levels of the body fluids are controlled. 3.7 Perform a first-hand investigations of the structure of a mammalian kidney by dissection, use of a model or visual resource and identify the regions involved in the excretion of waste products Equipment: Sheep kidney Dissecting board Scalpel Probe Gloves Newspaper, magnifying glass Risk assessment: Be sure to safely dispose of kidney to avoid outbreak of disease Use care when cutting kidney, cut from blade = infection Method: 1. Observe outer shape of kidney and capsule 2. Identify tubes entering kidney – ureter, renal artery, renal vein 3. Cut kidney in half lengthways 4. Observe internall structure 5. Use probe to follow pathway from ureter into pelvis 6. Safely dispose of kidney [insert diagram here] HSC Biology - Maintaining a Balance summaries 2012 hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 12 of 17 3.8 Gather, process and analyse information from secondary sources to compare the process of renal dialysis with the function of the kidney Dialysis = process which allows solutes dissolves in blood to diffuse across a semipermeable membrane e.g. renal dialysis whereby waste products are removed from blood when person has mild kidney failure Feature Structure Kidney 1 million nephrons which filter the blood Renal dialysis Haemodialysis occurs in hospital where patient is attached via tube in veins, to machine that circulates blood through semipermeable filters and take out toxin in blood. The procedure usually takes approx. 3 to 4 hours. Dialysers consist of three parts: compartment for the blood, compartment for dialysate and semipermeable membrane separating the two Function and nitrogenous wastes Other functions Removes urea from blood Removes urea from blood Concentrations of desired solutes can be adjusted by altering the composition of the dialysis to maintain natural concentration for healthy blood How often it occurs Maintains body balance of salts. E.g. potassium, calcium etc. Releases into the blood stream hormones that regulate vital functions including blood pressure, red blood cell production Each day two kidneys excrete about 1.5 to 2.5 litres of urine Filtration and reabsorption Filters and reabsorbs required materials Haemodialysis - Can be done in short sessions e.g. 3 to 4 hours in hospital Peritoneal – needs to be performed every day Filters but no reabsorbtion 3.9 Outline the role of the hormones aldosterone and ADH (anti- diuretic hormone) in the regulation of water and salt levels in blood Aldosterone: - Steroid hormone secreted by adrenal gland - Regulates the transofer of sodium and potassium ions in kidney - Causes increased active transport of sodium ions from nephron distal tubules Water follows and is reabsorbed from tubeules This causes concentration of solutes in blood to decrease and blood pressure rises Function: Action - HSC Biology - Maintaining a Balance summaries 2012 hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 13 of 17 Anti – diuretic hormones: Function: Action: - Produced from neurosecretory cells in hypothalamus in brain Controls water reabsorption in the nephron In kidney, increases permeability of distal tubules and collecting ducts to water - This increases the amount of water reabsorbed and concentration of solutes decreases Both are suppressed by a negative feedback system 3.10 Present information to outline the general use of hormone replacement therapy in people who cannot secrete aldosterone Hormone replacement therapy is a treatment given when a gland is not producing enough of a particular hormone Deficiency in aldosterone, can lead to Addison’s disease. Without treatment, condition is lethal as incorrect sodium levels cause electrolyte imbalances, hypertension and cardiac failure. Treatment of Addison’s disease involves replacing hormones, e.g. oral doses of fludrocortisone acetate, given once a day and adjusted to meet the needs of individuals 3.11 Analyse information from secondary sources to compare and explain the differences in urine concentration to terrestrial mammals, marine fish and freshwater fish Animal Marine fish Urine concentration Varies. Mammals live in desert= highly concentrated, herbivorous= less concentrated Highly concentrated Fresh water fish Dilute Mammal Reason for the difference Issue of conserving water, while at same time removing nitrogenous wastes Problem of osmosis. Concentration of dissolved substances in seawater usually low. Therefore, water tends to move out by osmosis and salts diffuse in. Concentration of dissolved substances usually higher in the body then they are in the environment. Water therefore moves out of body by omosis. Waste product = large amounts of dilute urine HSC Biology - Maintaining a Balance summaries 2012 hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 14 of 17 3.12 Use available evidence to explain the relationship between the conservation of water and the production and excretion of concentrated nitrogenous wastes in a range of Australian insects Ammonia: very toxic and must be removed immediately, either by diffusion or in very dilute urine Urea: toxic, but 100 000 time less toxic then ammonia, so it can be safely stored in the body for limited time Uric acid: less toxic then ammonia or urea, so can be safely stored in or on the body for extended periods of time spinifex – hopping mouse and Wallaroo: lives in environment with scarce water supplies - Mammals release urea as their nitrogenous waste - Urea is highly soluble in water - Therefore by releasing a highly concentrated urine they conserve water and can survive in the environment Insects: release uric acid as their nitrogenous waste - Insects are covered with a cuticle impervious to water, so they collect water through tubules - Uric acid is insoluble in water - They conserve water by producing a dry paste of uric acid 3.13 Define enantiostasis as the maintenance of metabolic and physiological functions in response to variations in the environment and discuss its importance to estuarine organisms in maintaining appropriate salt concentrations Enantiostasis maintenance of metabolic and psychological functions in the absence of homestasis, in an organisms response to a varying environment Particularly important to estuarine organisms as salinity varies greatly and regulary Estuary: Region where fresh water meets salt water, e.g. tidal mouth of river Organisms living in estuary environment experience large changes in salt concentration over a relative short time span, with tidal movements and salt and fresh water mixing. Importance of maintain an appropriate salt concentration Various bodily functions are affected when salt concentration of bodily fluids changes such as activity of enzymes For maintenance of normal functioning, another body function must be change in a way which compensates the change in enzyme activity For example, when salt concentration changes in the body, which reduces the efficiency of an enzyme, it is compensated for by a change in pH, increasing the efficiency of the same enzyme HSC Biology - Maintaining a Balance summaries 2012 hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 15 of 17 3.14 Process and analyse information from secondary sources and use available evidence to discuss processes used by different plants for salt regulation in saline environments Most plans cannot tolerate high salt concentrations in the support zone as it leads to water stress. Salt accumulates in the leaves and is toxic. Grey mangrove - Found in Sydney estuaries Secretes salt through secretory glands on their lower leaf surfaces Salt crystalises upon evaporation and then is washed or blown away Aegiceras cornicalatum - Mangrove found on NSW coast - Stores salt in leaves then drops leaves Sarcocornia quinqueflora - Salt marsh plants - Accumulates salts in swollen leaf bases which fall off, thus removing excess salts 3.15 Describe adaptations of a range of terrestrial Australian plants that assist in minimising water loss Eucalyptus Leaves hang vertically, thick waxy cuticles How this minimises water loss: - Less surface area exposed to midday sun - Less transparent and evaporation - Reflective, prevents evaporation Spinifex grass Leaves coil around underside How this minimises water loss: - Stomates on underside are protected from heat, wind - Water loss from transpiration reduced Acacia Spp Extensive root system with root nodules How this minimises water loss: - Increases ability to absorb water when available HSC Biology - Maintaining a Balance summaries 2012 hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 16 of 17 3.16 perform a first-hand investigation to gather information about structures in plants that assist in the conservation of water Make thin cross section of spinifex and cactus Cactus – stems store water - Generally cactuses live in dry arid conditions, so the storing of water is advantageous when water availability is low Casuarina: - Leaves reduced to scales - Reduces transpiration Spinifex grass - Stromates on underside of curled leaf - Results in water having difficulty transpiring and water loss is reduced Hairs on the underside Restricts movement of water away from plant and hinders air movement resulting in less transpiration and water loss HSC Biology - Maintaining a Balance summaries 2012 hscintheholidays.com.au All Rights Reserved. Page 17 of 17