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Regulating The Internal Environment Homeostasis The ability of animals to regulate their internal environment. Thermoregulation - the ability of animals to regulate their internal temperature. Osmoregulation – the ability of animals to regulate their water balance. Excretion – how animal s rid themselves of nitrogenous wastes. An Overview of Homeostasis Regulators - actively regulate their own internal environment in response to external. Cannot tolerate large internal changes. Salmon are osmoregulators Endotherms are thermoregulators Conformers – allow some conditions to vary in response to the external environment. Live in relatively stable environments and somewhat conform to their external environment. Spider crabs will gain or lose water in reponse to a variation in salinity. Regulaters Verses Conformers No Organism is a Perfect Conformer or Regulator Salmon may osmoregulate but they generally conform to the external temperatures. For a particular condition animals may regulate or conform. A forest dwelling lizard may have to travel long distances to perch in the sun and therefore choose to regulate its body temperature in the forest to avoid predation. The same lizard may choose to bask in the sun in open predation. Biochemical and Physiological Processes Vary With Body Temperature. Enzyme mediated reactions may vary 2-3 fold for every 10o C temperature increase. Q10 effect – multiple by which a particular process increases with a 10o increase in body temperature. Membranes are affected by temperature and can affect animal unction. Glycogen hydrolysis occurs 2.5 greater at 30oC than 20oC then the Q10 of the reaction is 2.5. Muscle contractions can be affected and the ability of the animal to run, jump or fly. All animals have an optimal temperature in which they can function. Physical Processes Account for Heat Lost or Gained. Conduction - Direct transfer of heat through contact with the environment. Convection - transfer of heat by the movement of a liquid or gas past a surface. Radiation - emission of electromagnetic radiation from objects. Evaporation – heat removal through evaporation Heat Exchange Cool Purple Lizard on a Rock Ectothermy Verses Endothermy Ectotherms generate such little heat through metabolism that their Because endotherms can maintain a stable internal temperature they can sustain prolonged activities. Endotherms are also better designed to live on land and can A disadvantage of being an endotherm is that they must consume much more food because of their energy needs. body temperature is determined by the environment. tolerate the large fluxuations in temperature. Endotherms Verses Ectotherms Physiological Thermoregulation Adjusting the rate of heat exchange between the organism and its environment. Insulation – fur and feather fluffing Vasodilation – dilate blood vessels at the surface of the skin to dissapate heat. Vasoconstriction – constrict blood vessels to direct blood towards the core and away from the extremities where heat is lost. Countercurrent Heat Exchange Arrangement of blood vessels are designed to either trap or release heat more efficiently. Arteries carrying warm blood from the animal’s core are in close proximity to the cooler blood in the veins returning to the core. Keeps artic wolf legs from freezing. By counter current exchange un-insulated toe pads are kept just above 0 o C to prevent heat loss but not cold enough to freeze. Help dissipate heat when running long distances. Counter Current Heat Exchange Puffin Warm Blood Heats Cold Blood Great White Shark Thermoregulation of the Shark Skin Section Evaporative Cooling Behavioral Sweating Panting Making their bodies wet Change posture Migrate Bask in the sun or go swimming Changing the rate of metabolic heat production Non-shivering thermogenesis Brown fat – lipid found in the neck and shoulders of some animals that create mostly thermal energy Happy Happy Hippos Invertebrates Mostly thermoconformers Desert locusts don’t move until they warm up. Some bees and moths are endothermic Flight muscles generate heat Some shiver to produce heat Countercurrent exchange Some bees huddle together when cold Some bees transport water to the hive and evaporate the water by fanning their wings. Adjustment to Changing Temperatures Nerves in the skin sense temperature changes and the hypothalamus in the brain responds. Acclimmatization is a physiological response to temperature change over a period of weeks or days. Grow a thicker coat or shed. Produce enzymes that work at different temperatures. Membranes change proportion of saturated verses unsaturated fatty acids within the phospholipds. May creates cryoprotectant compounds. Cells can make rapid adjustments in response to extreme stress. Heat shock proteins – help maintain the integrity of other proteins that would denature under extreme heat. The physiological adaptations that animals make during acclimatization affect their tolerance to temperature. Summer acclimatization of the bull heaeded cat fish can survive water temperatures of 36oC but cannot function in cold water. How Animals Deal With Environmental Extremes Torpor is a physiological state in which activity is low and metabolism decreases. Hibernation is a long term winter torpor. Estivation is a long term summer torpor when sources of water are scarce. Daily Torpor is a short term torper Adpated to feeding patterns. Shrews feed at night and are inactive during the day. Appears to be controlled by a biological clock. The Belding’s squirrel can live on one Kcal per day while hibernating Water and Waste Disposal Osmoregulation Management of the body’s solute concentration. Management of water into and out of the body. Depends on transport epitheilium. Layer or layers of specialized cells that regulate solute movements in a particular direction and in certain quantities. Structure Verses Function Some of these epitheilia Face outwards Line openings Are arranged in tubular networks that have large surface areas. Joined by tight junctions to create barriers between the environment and body tissue Salt Excreting glands in Birds The Nature of Nitrogenous Waste Nitrogenous wastes are created through de-amination, the removal of an amine group from of proteins and nucleic acids. Primary toxic product is ammonia. These wastes must be dissolved in water and therefore affect the water balance. Nitrogenous Waste Depends on Habitat The kinds of nitrogenous waste an animal excretes depends on the availability of water in its habitat and evolutionary history. The amount and composition of waste produced depends on energy needs and diet. Endotherms have high energy needs and consequently excrete more than ectotherms. Carnivores take in large amounts of protein and excrete large amounts of nitorgenous watse. Ammonia Animals that live in the water can excrete ammonia. They can simply swim away from their waste. Requires less energy to convert ammonia to something else. In Fish most of the ammonia is lost as ammonium ions(NH4) across the gills and the kidneys only excrete a small amount of waste Urea Since terrestrial animals have to carry their waste around with them ammonia is much too toxic. Ammonia is converted to urea by combining CO2 and ammonia. It takes energy to do this and is consequently reflected in their energy budget. Mammals, adult amphibians and many marine fishes excrete urea. Urea can be excreted in much more concentrated solutions because it is less toxic than ammonia. Many amphibians excrete ammonia as tadpoles but switch to urea as adults. Uric Acid Land snails, insects, reptiles and birds excrete uric acid. Egg layers and flying organisms that cannot carry a lot of water excrete solid waste only. Uric acid is the least toxic and precipitates. Settles to the bottom of the egg to protect growing bird or reptile embryo. Keeps insects from drying out and makes them light for flight. Tortoises can switch from urea to uric acid when there is a deficit of water in the environment. Osmoconformers Verses Osmoregulators There are two solutions to maintaining internal water balance. Osmoconformers match the osmolarity of the environment. Osmoregulators actively absorb or excrete solutes to maintain a constant internal osmolarity within body tissues. The osmolarity of blood is approximately 300 millimoles per liter(mosm/L). Sea water is approximately 1000 mosm/L Extreme Environments Being an osmoregulator is expensive. Most animals are stenohaline. Steno means narrow , haline means salt. Euryhaline animals can tolerate large osmotic fluxuations in their external environment. Eurys means broad(Greek) Maintaining Water Balance in the Sea Invertebrates are osmoconformers. Even though the osmolarity of their tissues match the environment they do regulate the composition of their internal environment. (specific solutes) Marine vertebrates except hagfish are osmoregulators. These animals constantly lose water to the environment. Must drink large amounts of water and excrete excess salts through their gills. Sharks are actually hyperosmotic to their environment because they concentrate urea in their tissues. They protect themselvs from the toxicity of urea with TMAO (trimethylamine oxide). Water enters the shark’s body by diffusion so they don’t drink. Maintaining Osmotic Balance In Fresh Water Fresh water organisms are constantly gaining water because their tissues are hyperosmotic to their environment. Fresh water protists (Amoeba and Paramecium) have contractile vacuoles pump the excess water out. Most fresh water organisms excrete dilute urine and replenish salt through their diet. Salmon osmoregulate while in the ocean by drinking water and excreting slat through their gills and cease drinking and excrete dilute urine while in fresh water. Special Problems Anhydrobiosis Organism completely dehydrates and enters a dormant state until water is available again. Membrane remains in tact during dehydration because trehalose (disaccharide) replaces water. Desert Kangaroo rat lives entirely on water created by their metabolism. Kangaroo Rat from the South West Osmotic Balance on Land Skin and keratinized shells prevent animals and insects from drying out. Waxy cuticles for plants. Drink water and eat moist food. Produce metabolic water (mitochondria) Go out at night time. Anhydrobiosis of the Tardigrade EXCRETORY SYSTEMS OVERVIEW Body fluid is collected and filtered Hemolymph, blood, coelomic fluid Usually filtered by selectively permeable membranes of transport epithelia. Large proteins and cells are left behind. Hydrostatic pressure forces water and small solutes through. Salts Sugars Amino acids Nitrogenous wastes Largely non selective filtering occurs here. Selective absorption or secretion Now called the filtrate, its composition adjusted. Active transport is used to selectively reabsorb essential nutrients. Glucose Some salts Amino acids Wastes are left in the filtrate to be excreted. Protonephridia of the Flatworm Metanephridia of the Annelid Malpighian Tubules of the Insect Counter Current Exchange Antidiuretic Hormone When there is an increase in osmolarity in the blood: Osmoreceptors present in the hypothalamus make us feel thirsty. Antidiuretic Hormone is released by the pituitary gland and causes water to be reabsorbed in the collecting duct by increasing its permeability. Rennin Angiotensin Aldosterone System RAAS is another mechansim that maintains the osmolarity of the blood. The jusxtaglomerular apparatus is a patch of tissue that within the afferent blood vessel that feeds blood to the glomurulus that responds tto a drop in blood pressure. In response to this drop in blood pressure the JGA releases renin which turns angiotensin into angiotensin II. Angiotensisn II constricts blood vesseles to increase blood pressure. Aldosterone and the Adrenal Glands Angiotensis II also stimulates the adenal glands located on top of the kidneys to release Aldosterone. Aldosternone causes Na+ to be reabsorbed in the distal tubule and water follows. Ensures that the blood does not become diluted in response to the reabsorption of water. A hormone called atrial natriuretic factor is released from the atrium responds to an increase of blood pressure and is the off switch for RAAS. How the Gradient is Maintained The juxtamedullary nephron uses the gradient in the kidney to excrete urine that is hyperosmotic to the kidney tissue. The descending Loop of Henle is permeable to H2O but not NaCl. As filtrtate moves towards the medulla H2O diffuses out. The filtrate becomes increasing hyperosmotic. The filtrate has the highest osmolarity at the bottom of the loop. The ascending Loop of Henle is permeable to salt but not water. Since the filtrate at this point is hyperosmotic to the kidney NaCl diffuses out. This contributes to the high osmolarity of the medulla. At the upper portion of the ascending loop salt moves out through active transport which requires ATP This ensures that the gradient will not dissapte. Counter Current Exchange Also Maintains the Gradient Capillaries that surround the nephron are called the vasa recta. The blood in the capillaries that surround the descending loop of Henle lose water and gain salt. The blood in the capillaries that surround the ascending loop of Henle lose salt and gain water. This helps maintain the gradient in the kidney. How Terrestrial Animals Excrete Urine That is Hyperosmotic When the filtrate reaches the distal tubule it is hypoosmotic because NaCl has been removed by active transport. When the filtrate descends back towards the medulla in the collecting duct H2O diffuses out because the collecting duct is permeable to H2O and not salt. This concentrates salt and urea in the filtrate. Urea leaks out at the bottom of the collecting duct which contributes the gradient. The filtrate is isoosmotic to the inner medulla when it empties into the renal pelvis but is hyperosmotic to the blood and interstitial fluid in the rest of the body. Special Adaptations of the Kidney Vampire bats can switch from excreting large amounts of dilute urine while feeding to excreting urine concentrated with urea while roosting. Diverse Adaptations of the Nephron Desert animals excrete hyperosmotic urine. Have exceptionally long loops of Henle to allow for maximum absorption of water. Maintain steep gradients in the kidney. Birds have very short loops of Henle and cannot concentrate urine like mammals can. They do produce hyperosmotic urine but conserve water by producing uric acid. Reptiles have only cortical nephrons and produce urine that is isoosmotic to body fluids. Epithelium of the cloaca reabsorb water. Excrete uric acid to conserve water as well. Amphibians take in water by diffusion through the skin. Excrete dilute urine and accumulate salts through the skin through active transport. On land frogs reabsorb water through bladder epithelia. Boney Salt water fish are hypoosmotic to their environment and have excretory tubules(no glomuruli or Bowmans capsule). Excrete small amounts of concentrated urine.