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Chapter 44 Osmoregulation and Excretion PowerPoint Lectures for Biology, Seventh Edition Neil Campbell and Jane Reece Lectures by Chris Romero Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Overview: A Balancing Act • Physiological systems of animals operate in a fluid environment • Relative concentrations of water and solutes must be maintained within fairly narrow limits Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings • Freshwater animals show adaptations that reduce water uptake and conserve solutes • Desert & marine animals face desiccating environments that quickly deplete body water Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings This Chapter Discussion Around 1. Osmoregulation (regulatn solute concs & gain/loss of water) 2. Excretion gets rid of metabolic wastes Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Concept 44.1: Osmoregulation balances the uptake and loss of water and solutes • Osmoregulation is based largely on controlled movement of solutes between internal fluids and the external environment Osmosis • Cells require a balance between osmotic gain and loss of water • Various mechanisms of osmoregulation in different environments balance water uptake and loss - isoosmotic- same on both sides of membrane - hyperosmotic Water flows from hyperosmotic to hypoosmotic - hypoosmotic Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Osmotic Challenges • Osmoconformers = (some marine animals) are isoosmotic with their surroundings and do not regulate their osmolarity • Osmoregulators = expend energy to control water uptake & loss in a hyperosmotic or hypoosmotic environment Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings • Most animals are stenohaline; they cannot tolerate substantial changes in external osmolarity • Euryhaline animals can survive large fluctuations in external osmolarity Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Marine Animals • Most marine invertebrates are osmoconformers • Most marine vertebrates and some invertebrates are osmoregulators Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings • Marine bony fishes hypoosmotic to sea water • They lose water by osmosis and gain salt by diffusion & from food • They balance water loss by drinking seawater • Freshwater animals constantly take in water from their hypoosmotic environment • They lose salts by diffusion & maintain water balance by excreting large amounts of dilute urine • Salts lost by diffusion are replaced by foods & uptake across the gills Land Animals • manage water budgets by drinking & eating moist foods & using metabolic water • Desert animals get major water savings from simple anatomical features Transport Epithelia • Transport epithelia are specialized cells that regulate solute movement • They are essential components of osmotic regulation and metabolic waste disposal • They are arranged in complex tubular networks Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Example = salt glands marine birds remove excess NaCl Nasal salt gland Nostril with salt secretions Lumen of secretory tubule Vein Capillary Artery Secretory tubule NaCl Transport epithelium Direction of salt movement Blood flow Secretory cell of transport epithelium Central duct Secretory cells actively transport salt from blood into tubules for secretion Concept 44.2: An animal’s nitrogenous wastes reflect its phylogeny and habitat • The type and quantity of an animal’s waste products may greatly affect its water balance • Most impt wastes = nitrogenous bkdwn prodts of prots & nucl acids - N waste = ammonia which toxic Wastes must be dissolved in H2O for secretion Different animals excrete nitrogenous wastes in different forms: ammonia, urea, or uric acid Ammonia • Animals that excrete nitrogenous wastes as ammonia need lots of water • They release ammonia across the whole body surface or through gills Urea • Liver of mammals & most adult amphibians converts ammonia to less toxic urea • The circulatory system carries urea to the kidneys, where it is excreted Uric Acid • Insects, land snails, and many reptiles, including birds, mainly excrete uric acid • Uric acid is largely insoluble in water and can be secreted as a paste with little water loss • The kinds of nitrogenous wastes excreted depend on an animal’s habitat • The amount of nitrogenous waste is coupled to the animal’s energy budget Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Concept 44.3: Diverse excretory systems are variations on a tubular theme • Excretory systems regulate solute mvt between internal fluids & ext environ • Most excretory systems produce urine by refining a filtrate derived from body fluids Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Excretory Processes Filtration: pressure-filtering of body fluids Reabsorption: reclaiming valuable solutes Secretion: adding toxins & other solutes from body fluids to the filtrate Excretion: removing the filtrate from system Vertebrate Kidneys • Kidneys, the excretory organs of vertebrates, function in both excretion and osmoregulation Concept 44.4: Nephrons & assoc bld vessels = functional unit mammalian kidney • The mammalian excretory system centers on paired kidneys, which are also major site of water balance & salt regulation • Each kidney is supplied with blood by a renal artery & drained by a renal vein • Urine exits each kidney through a duct called the ureter • Both ureters drain into a common urinary bladder from which excretion Animation: Nephron Introduction Structure and Function of the Nephron and Associated Structures • mammalian kidney has 2 regions – outer renal cortex – inner renal medulla • The nephron, the functional unit of the vertebrate kidney, consists of a single long tubule and a ball of capillaries called the glomerulus Filtration of the Blood • Filtration occurs as blood pressure forces fluid from the blood in the glomerulus into the lumen of Bowman’s capsule The filtrate in Bowman’s capsule mirrors the concentration of solutes in blood plasma Pathway of the Filtrate • From Bowman’s capsule, the filtrate passes through three regions of the nephron: the proximal tubule, the loop of Henle, and the distal tubule • Fluid from several nephrons flows into a collecting duct Blood Vessels Associated with the Nephrons • Each nephron is supplied with blood by an afferent arteriole, a branch of the renal artery that divides into the capillaries • The capillaries converge as they leave the glomerulus, forming an efferent arteriole • The vessels divide again, forming the peritubular capillaries, which surround the proximal and distal tubules Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings • Filtrate becomes urine as it flows through the mammalian nephron and collecting duct • Major reabsorbtion in proximal tubule + some secretion • Reabsorption of water continues as filtrate moves into the descending limb of the loop of Henle • In the ascending limb of the loop of Henle, salt diffuses from the permeable tubule into the interstitial fluid • The distal tubule regulates the K+ and NaCl concentrations of body fluids • The collecting duct carries filtrate through the medulla to the renal pelvis and reabsorbs NaCl Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings LE 44-14 Proximal tubule NaCl Nutrients HCO3– K+ H2O H+ NH3 Distal tubule H2O NaCl K+ HCO3– H+ CORTEX Descending limb of loop of Henle Filtrate H2O Salts (NaCl and others) HCO3– H+ Urea Glucose; amino acids Some drugs Thick segment of ascending limb NaCl H2O OUTER MEDULLA NaCl Thin segment of ascending limb Key Collecting duct Urea NaCl Active transport Passive transport INNER MEDULLA H2O Animation: Bowman's Capsule and Proximal Tubule Animation: Loop of Henle and Distal Tubule Animation: Collecting Duct Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Concept 44.5: The mammalian kidney’s ability to conserve water is a key terrestrial adaptation • The mammalian kidney conserves water by producing urine that is much more concentrated than body fluids Regulation of Kidney Function • The osmolarity of the urine is regulated by nervous and hormonal control of water and salt reabsorption in the kidneys • Antidiuretic hormone (ADH) increases water reabsorption in the distal tubules and collecting ducts of the kidney Animation: Effect of ADH Osmoreceptors in hypothalamus Thirst Hypothalamus Drinking reduces blood osmolarity to set point ADH Increased permeability Pituitary gland Distal tubule STIMULUS The release of ADH is triggered when osmoreceptor cells in the hypothalamus detect an increase in the osmolarity of the blood H2O reabsorption helps prevent further osmolarity increase Collecting duct Homeostasis: Blood osmolarity