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Copyright Notice! This PowerPoint slide set is copyrighted by Ross Koning and is thereby preserved for all to use from plantphys.info for as long as that website is available. Images lacking photo credits are mine and, as long as you are engaged in non-profit educational missions, you have my permission to use my images and slides in your teaching. However, please notice that some of the images in these slides have an associated URL photo credit to provide you with the location of their original source within internet cyberspace. Those images may have separate copyright protection. If you are seeking permission for use of those images, you need to consult the original sources for such permission; they are NOT mine to give you permission. Tropical Biology (Costa Rica) Biology 320 May 20-31, 2008 Register for Bio 360 and 320 for Spring $1900 approximate cost Scholarships Available! For more information: Dr. Elliott or Dr. Szczys G113 or Planetarium EML ECSU Biology Club [email protected] Meetings: Tuesdays, 5 PM, Goddard Lobby House Party 9 PM November 13 Student Center Theater Food etc. Quiz 7: Highest score was one-question wrong. Congratulations ! Next-highest scores were 3 questions wrong…so I decided to adjust by 3 questions rather than 1. Obviously then, the highlighted score should be three columns to the left of what you earned. And for that one person…the resulting maximum score was 104.8% The Quiz 7 average was 70.9% The Course average of averages was 79.9% Next assignment due: Seed Germination Worksheet page 1 and 2 ONLY Monday, October 22, 2007. http://plantphys.info/organismal/ Please pick up two sample journal articles Biology: life study of What is Life? Properties of Life Cellular Structure: the unit of life, one or many Metabolism: photosynthesis, respiration, fermentation, digestion, gas exchange, secretion, excretion, circulation--processing materials and energy Growth: cell enlargement, cell number Movement: intracellular, movement, locomotion Reproduction: avoid extinction at death Behavior: short term response to stimuli Evolution: long term adaptation Obtaining Food Heterotrophs need to feed on other organisms, their byproducts, or their dead bodies to survive Heterotrophic Organisms Herbivores: feed directly upon producers Carnivores: feed directly upon herbivores or other carnivores Omnivores: feed upon both producers and consumers Parasites: feed upon living organisms causing disease Saprobes: feed upon by-products and/or dead bodies Food is required as fuel for respiration: Cytosolic Glycolysis: sugars to pyruvate Mitochondrial Matrix Krebs Cycle: pyruvate to CO2 and NADH Mitochondrial Cristae ETS/Oxidative Phosphorylation: NADH and O2 to H2O and ADP + Pi to ATP ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company Here is an invertebrate animal collecting plant byproducts. Nectar is a good supply of carbohydrate…not much else Pollen is a better supply of protein, vitamins, and minerals Prokaryotes intake small organics from the surrounding medium… by facilitated diffusion or active transport across cell membrane QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. Digestive enzymes secreted into the medium convert macromolecules into subunits for uptake http://library.thinkquest.org/3564/Cells/cell91.gif Here is a fungus body…these penetrate living or dead tissues… parasite ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company saprobe The haustoria digest the cells they penetrate or siphon off cellular components to support the fungal mycelium. Fungal digestion is basically EXTERNAL. •Digestive enzymes are secreted into the food •Subunits are absorbed by diffusion and active transport These fungi are more “active” in their feeding... They trap and strangle their nematode prey: B Arthrobotrys dactyloides sticky traps lasso What is the difference between these two images? ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company Dactylella drechsleri The feeding of two Paramecium by one Amoeba engulfing prey by phagocytosis ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company Paramecium Amoeba An example of internal digestion entrapment in food vacuole for digestion cilia movement 1 2 5 4 3 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. capture phagocytosis enzymatic digestion subunit absorption waste elimination ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company The feeding of Paramecium itself is also internal digestion: Intracellular food digestion: Golgi lysosome enzymes endoplasmic reticulum subunits waste exocytosis phagocytosis food vacuole 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. digestive vacuole phagocytosis of food food vacuole formation lysosome + food vacuole = digestive vacuole enzymatic digestion of food absorption of subunits exocytosis of waste Gastrovascular cavity digestion in Cnidarian polyp ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company gland cell secretes digestive enzymes to disintegrate prey item into smaller particles and anus! digestive cell takes in smaller particles for intracellular digestion This is a combination of external and internal digestion There is also a unique prey capture process in cnidarians ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company Cnidoblasts (cyan) contain nematocysts (yellow and blue) This feature of cnidarians is perhaps most famous in the scyphozoans (jellyfish) and hydrozoans (Portuguese-man-o-war) Notice the corrugations to increase the surface area for nutrient absorption. ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company In flatworms, such as Dugesia, and like cnidarians, the mouth is also the anus…the digestive system is a blind pouch. http://creatures.ifas.ufl.edu/nematode/nem_fig1.jpg Nematode Tubular Digestive System http://www.ua.es/dpto/dcarn/fitopatologia/Images/Celegans1.jpg http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/phyla/ecdysozoa/nematodexssm.gif ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company Earthworms also have a tubular digestive system ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company Earthworms also have a tubular digestive system Spring 2007 Registration Advising Go to the office of your academic advisor… do not telephone her/him! Danielle, Tina, Heather, Carlos: Media 224 Make an appointment… usually by sign-up sheet posted on the door Freshmen (<30 cr): November 26-30 Sophomores (30-<60 cr): November 5-9 Juniors (60-<90 cr): Oct 29-Nov 2 Seniors (>90 cr): THIS WEEK! Karl: The instructions for Seed Germination work in Excel 2007 Seed Germination Worksheet (pg 1 and 2 only) is due today. This cartoon shows a longitudinal slice of a chiton with the three principal parts: foot (locomotion or attachment), visceral mass (internal organs), and mantle (secretes valves). The radula scrapes food from environmental surfaces. dorsal aorta gonad valve plates heart pericardial cavity (coelom) ventricle hemocoel auricle radula mantle mouth anus foot digestive stomach nephridium nephridiopore gland ventral gonopore nerve cord (not shown) As for most molluscs, chitons use a radula to scrape their food from environmental surfaces. Below is a radula removed from a chiton mouth. Bivalve molluscs are filter feeders, however. http://www.abc.net.au/quantum/stories/Chiton_teeth_m97943.jpg Spider Anatomy: Not that different from a mollusc in many ways. Fang injects venom with digestive enzymes into prey The chelicera support tube as stomach sucks in liquified prey tissues Food passes through intestines for complete digestion/absorption Waste eliminated from anus http://www.rochedalss.eq.edu.au/spider/spideran.gif Insecta: the largest class out-numbers all other animals combined! Just about every environment…except marine! Entomology: the study of insects Evolved in Devonian period 400 MYBP http://www.anselm.edu/homepage/jpitocch/genbios/33-33-InsectAnatomy-L.gif A look inside: Insects have the open circulation system found in chitons, etc. The segmentation is not too far from the annelids. Much of the internal system is similar to molluscs. The major difference: spiracles on abdominal segments lead to tracheal tubes inside for gas exchange http://www.anselm.edu/homepage/jpitocch/genbios/33-33-InsectAnatomy-L.gif ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company This female mosquito has a diverticulum to hold a blood meal The animal lives for 4-5 days on this one meal The protein is used for laying a “raft” of eggs in water Most birds have a crop for holding food to feed offspring. The gizzard assists in mechanical grinding of food. The cloaca is a single exit for: •digestive •urinary •reproductive systems esophagus intestine gizzard stomach crop rectum cloaca http://i.pbase.com/u49/wangi/upload/40767363.P1150275small.jpg ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company Blue whales and other baleen whales are filter feeders You can see the baleen (teeth) of this whale that filter out krill ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company In most vertebrates, digestion begins with mastication using teeth Juvenile teeth may be replaced by adult teeth ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company Dentition may include cutting, tearing, and grinding teeth Among vertebrates the dentition has functional significance: beaver ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company snake deer dog amylase bile (emulsifier) bacterial culture unknown pepsin, HCl trypsin, amylase, H2CO3 (alk), lipase water reabsorption subunit absorption waste holding, elimination ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company The human digestive system: Seed Germination (page 1 and 2 only) 4 perfect papers…Congratulations! Average: 93.3% Scores will be included in course grade on next quiz. Get to work on creating your Z-test spreadsheet This will compare any treatment with its control. You will use the spreadsheet several times for this term project…so get going on it. Again, thanks to Karl for verifying that Office 2007 can use the instructions on page 5 of handout. ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company The movement of food in the digestive tube is by parastalsis ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company To increase the surface area of the absorptive regions of the intestine, the lining is corrugated and lined with villi ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company An intestinal cross section reveals the increased surface area: ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company The villi of the intestine have good blood supply for nutrient uptake Notice how the villus is coated with microvilli…for more area! microvilli villus ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company Here you can see the microvilli from a single villus Can you speculate why this might have evolved? ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company The carnivorous adult has a shorter digestive system than The herbivorous larva: Horses cannot digest much of their food. Microbes are only in the caecum. Horse manure makes good compost and food for fungi. Equus caballus http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/64/Frisian_horse.jpg/800px-Frisian_horse.jpg Because their microbes are in their caecum too, rabbits pass material through their digestive system twice. Oryctolagus cuniculus http://www.dcn.davis.ca.us/go/pmartin/photos/vodka.jpg In ruminants, the microbe culture is mixed with masticated food in the rumen. The mixture is masticated repeatedly (chewing the cud) from this rumen to assist fermentation… especially hydrolysis of cellulose. Then the mixture passes to the rest of the digestive system Bos taurus ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company Ruminant animals use bacteria and archaeons to assist digestion ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company The herbivorous tropical bird, the hoatzin, uses a muscular crop for its fermentation vat. It can represent 20% of the bird’s total weight! It is a poor flier. Its young falling, into swamps below, crawl back up into the nest using claws on the wings (like dinosaurs). Opisthocomus hoazin Digestion of polysaccharides amylase amylase Glucose Glucose Starch Maltose maltase amylase Maltose maltase Glucose Glucose Glucose Glucose Glucose Glucose Protein digestion in mammals: Stomach pepsin amino end His Pancreas Glu Tyr pepsin Thr Lys His Glu Ser chymotrypsin trypsin His Glu Tyr Thr terminal AA removers His Glu Lys His Arg Asp trypsin Glu Ser Arg Asp Trp Thr Phe chymotrypsin Trp Thr Phe Thr Phe aminopeptidase carboxypeptidase Tyr dipeptide splitter dipeptidase Thr Lys His dipeptidase Glu Ser Arg dipeptidase Asp Trp dipeptidase His Glu Tyr Thr Lys His Glu Ser Arg Asp Trp Thr Phe His Glu Tyr Thr Lys His Glu Ser Arg Asp Trp Thr Phe Individual Amino Acids For Absorption carboxyl end Activation by acidic pepsin cleavage Finished chymotrypsin with active site recognizing Tyr, Trp and Phe ©1996 Norton Presentation Maker, W. W. Norton & Company Chymotrypsinogen conversion into chymotrypsin Chymotrypsinogen from pancreas Summary of macromolecule digestion into subunits Polysaccharides Disaccharides Monosaccharides starch (amylose) salivary amylase pancreatic amylase Proteins maltose sucrose lactose Peptides Endopeptidases: stomach pepsin pancreatic trypsin pancreatic chymotrypsin intestinal maltase sucrase lactase gluose frucose galactose Amino Acids Exopeptidases: pancreatic intestinal monoglycerides Fats (triglycerides) Emulsified fats pancreatic lipase fatty acids liver bile glycerol lactose lactase glucose + galactose In normal human genotypes, adult lactase production is shut down, making fermentation of milk products only by bacteria in the large intestine result in cramps, gas, and diarrhea. Lacking mutation in adult shutdown of lactase production <25% Dutch, Swedes, Danes, Swiss, US Whites, Germans, Slavs, Northern French, Northern Italians, Tutsi, Fulani (milk in adult diet) >40% Indian, Southern Italians, Saami, US Hispanics, Balkans, Mexicans, Maasai, Southern French, Greeks, South Americans, African Americans, Lebanese >80% Central Asians, Eskimo, Australian Aborigines, Bantu, Chinese, Southeast Asians, Native Americans (no milk in adult diet)