Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Ch 40- Intro. to Animal Structure/Function 5/7/2017 1 Tissues = group of cells with common structure & function 1) Epithelial - tightly packed, protective covering, skin, around organs classify by # of layers: simple vs. stratified (and pseudostratified) or by shape: cuboidal, columnar, squamous (flat) 5/7/2017 2 2) Connective- supports tissues, usually in a matrix ex. blood, bone, cartilage, adipose (fat) 5/7/2017 3 3) Nervous - sense stimuli and transmit signals neuron - functional part that carries signals 5/7/2017 4 4) Muscle - long protein fibers, aids movement & support ex. skeletal, striated, cardiac, smooth 5/7/2017 5 • Organ - groups of tissues, work same function together for • Mesenteries – connective tissue between cavities • Organ system - groups of organs working together • Organism - group of organ systems working together 5/7/2017 6 • animals must maintain a stable environment • involves regulating fluid, temp, gas, pH etc. • uses negative feedback = sensing mechanism (receptor) detects changes & activates a second mechanism (effector) to reverse problem • A buildup causes a shut down and vise versa • Positive feedback = triggers amplification instead, ex. Childbirth 5/7/2017 7 5/7/2017 8 Ch 41 5/7/2017 9 • homeostasis is also important in nutrition, balance fuel needs • chemicals such as leptin help regulate appetite • glucose sugar levels are kept in check by the insulin produced in the pancreas • glucagon is released when blood sugar is low, glucose is released 5/7/2017 10 5/7/2017 11 • essential nutrients that must be obtained from the diet: vitamins, minerals, water, carbon and energy • 8 A.A. that need to be ingested (body can’t make) • Same with some fatty acids • Vitamins – organic molecules needed in ones diet, p.877 • Minerals – inorganic molecules needed in smaller amounts, p.878 5/7/2017 12 5/7/2017 13 5/7/2017 14 • 4 parts: ingestion (eating), digestion (break down), absorption (get nutrients) and elimination (feces) • Digestion can be intracellular by vacuoles and enzymes (Paramecium) or extracellular by some breakdown outside of the cells, usually starts in a cavity (gastrovascular/alimentary canals) 5/7/2017 15 5/7/2017 16 1) Mouth – mechanical breakdown by teeth, chemical breakdown by amylase (salivary glands) = enzyme breaks down starch • food gets formed into a ball or bolus 2) Pharynx – food moves down this tube also called the throat • flap of tissue called epiglottis, keeps food down correct track 3) Esophagus – tube that leads to the stomach, food moves by muscle contractions called peristalsis 5/7/2017 17 5/7/2017 18 4) Stomach – elastic muscle, churns food, holds 2L, gastric juices (HCl), pepsin released to break down proteins, now called chyme 5/7/2017 19 5) Small intestine – pyloric sphincter opens, food passes •6m segmented tube, first part is the duodenum, here enzymes are released from the walls: •proteases break down proteins •phosphates that break down nucleic acids •remaining parts of S.I. are the jejunum and ileum where nutrients are absorbed by finger-like projections = villi 5/7/2017 20 Auxiliary Organs • pancreas releases proteases, amylases, and lipases into S.I. • liver produces bile (stored in gall bladder) that contains salts to break up fats 5/7/2017 21 • 6) Large intestine – colon, absorbs water, remaining feces are expelled, bacteria live here • at the top a projection there is a projection called the appendix, in herbivores it is called the cecum and aids in cellulose digestion 5/7/2017 22 5/7/2017 23 • gastrin – made by stomach lining, stimulates cells to make gastric juices, responds to smell and sight • secretin – made by S.I., causes pancreas to make bicarbonate to neutralize chymes acidity • cholestokinin – made by S.I. and stimulates gall bladder to release bile 5/7/2017 24 Ch 42 5/7/2017 25 Transport, exchange of blood, gas, nutrients, waste Open circulatory system – pumps fluid through an internal cavity blood bathes tissues with nutrient rich fluid called hemolymph, ex. insects, mollusks Closed circulatory system – pumps blood through vessels to tissues, ex. vertebrates, annelids 5/7/2017 26 Arteries – vessels carrying oxygenated blood away from the heart, (direction is the key) Exception- pulmonary artery – oxygen poor blood Arterioles – small branches of arteries, branch into Capillaries where exchange occurs by diffusion (O2, CO2, waste) 5/7/2017 27 Vein- vessels carry deoxygenated blood to the heart and to the lungs Exception – pulmonary vein – oxygen rich Venules – smaller branches of veins 5/7/2017 28 Right atrium – deoxygenated blood enters via anterior & posterior vena cava AV valve (tricuspid) – keeps correct blood flow, “lub” Rt. ventricle – strong, contracts to pump blood out Semilunar valve - prevents backflow, “dub” Pulmonary artery- oxygen low blood to the capillaries in the lungs, gets O2 Pulmonary vein (high oxygen)→Left atrium→ left AV valve, left ventricle aortic semilunar valve Aorta (largest artery), coronary artery is here and supplies blood to the heart itself, blood now goes through arteries to the body Exchange of oxygen and CO2, diffusion Veins carry blood to the vena cava, to the rt. atrium 5/7/2017 29 5/7/2017 30 Double circulation – look p874 Pulmonary circuit = blood moves from the heart →lungs →heart, gets O2 Systemic circuit = blood moves through the body, loses oxygen 5/7/2017 31 Systole – contraction of the heart Diastole – relaxation of the heart Cardiac output = volume per minute of the left ventricle = 5.25 L/min = volume of blood in the body Heart’s rhythm is regulated by autorhythmic cells Diastole - SA node (sinoatrial) or pacemaker (top of Rt. Atrium) signals contraction of the atria, delayed impulse to AV node AV node stimulates purkinje fibers,ventricles contract Systole - blood forces through p. artery and aorta, AV closes , surgery 5/7/2017 32 5/7/2017 33 5/7/2017 34 ECG – measures the electric current Initial pressure starts via the heart, aided by the smooth and skeletal muscles that surround vessels fig 42.10– bp 5/7/2017 35 5/7/2017 36 Returns lost nutrients back to the blood through lymph nodes lymph filters the blood and removes "things" in conjunction with the immune system, 4L a day 5/7/2017 37 1) Red blood cells (erythrocytes) - 25 trillion, transport O2, no nucleus, anaerobic, live 3-4 months 5/7/2017 38 2) White blood cells (leukocytes) - diseasefighting cells, # varies 3) platelets - help clot blood with fibrin 4) plasma - 55% of blood, mostly fluid of water, waste, nutrients 5/7/2017 39 Mechanisms 1) Direct with environment - cells directly exchange gasses by diffusion, ex. flatworms 2) Gills = outgrowths from the body to increase surface area and exchange gas, common in fish 5/7/2017 40 countercurrent exchange between water & blood, p888 3) Trachea - chitin lined tubes found in insects, gas moves through openings called spiracles 5/7/2017 41 4) Lungs - cavities within the body, ex. mammals 5/7/2017 42 gas enters the nose - warmed and cleansed by hairs moves through pharynx and larynx (voice box) trachea = cartilage lined tube, covered by epiglottis trachea splits into bronchi which enter lungs and continue to branch into smaller tubes = bronchioles bronchioles end at alveoli, which are air sacs surrounded by blood carrying capillaries 5/7/2017 43 here diffusion take place between alveoli and the blood, CO2 diffuses out into alveoli and O2 diffuses in the blood transports the O2 via hemoglobin in the RBC, the O2 binds with iron, baby oxygenated blood goes to the body tissues and diffuses in 5/7/2017 44 CO2 is moved as bicarbonate ions (HCO3-) – ph air is moved through the lungs by the diaphragm = large muscle under the lungs, and intercostals muscles = muscles between the ribs diaphragm relaxes, increases pressure in the lungs and air moves out 5/7/2017 45 diaphragm contracts, decreases pressure, air moves in Total lung capacity is 6 L, at normal breathing rate about ½ L goes in, and ½ L goes out = tidal volume Vital capacity = huge breath = 4800 ml Reserve capacity = 1200 ml, can’t rid of this air at rest we breath 12 x a minute controlled by chemoreceptor in the carotid arteries that monitor pH, the more CO2 = more acidic pH, which increases breathing rate this is a negative feedback loop loading and unloading – p893-894 5/7/2017 46 5/7/2017 47