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Control of the Internal Environment

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Convection transfer of heat by the movement of air/liquid past a body surface ... Ex: great white sharks. Behavior also affects body temperature ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Control of the Internal Environment


1
Control of the Internal Environment
  • Ch. 25

2
Objectives Define Comprehend
  • Types of thermoregulation
  • Endotherms vs. ectotherms
  • Countercurrent heat exchanger
  • Role of behavior in thermoregulation
  • Metabolic rates
  • Osmoregulation
  • Seasonal dehydration

3
Thermoregulation
  • Heat is gained or lost in 4 ways
  • Conduction direct transfer of thermal motion
    between molecules
  • Convection transfer of heat by the movement of
    air/liquid past a body surface
  • Radiation emission of electromagnetic energy
  • Transfer heat between objects that are not in
    direct contact
  • Evaporative cooling loss of heat from the
    surface of a liquid that is transforming into a
    gas

4
Thermoregulation
5
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6
Thermoregulation
7
Thermoregulation
  • Endotherms and many ectotherms maintain a fairly
    constant internal temp as the external temp
    fluctuates
  • Endotherms and some ectotherms alter rate of
    metabolic heat production
  • Both endotherms and ectotherms change rate of
    heat gain or loss by conduction, convection,
    radiation, or evaporative cooling

8
Thermoregulation
  • In cold weather, mammals and birds
  • Boost metabolic rate increases heat production
  • How?
  • Shivering increases heat produced by skeletal
    muscles
  • Heat loss regulated by hair raise hairs when
    cold why?
  • In some animals insulation provided by fat
  • Blood flowing to skin
  • vessels constrict or dilate
  • Evaporative cooling panting or sweating

9
Thermoregulation
  • Many ectotherms
  • Ex bees survive cold by clustering and shivering
  • Combined metabolic activity generates enough heat
    to keep cluster alive

10
Countercurrent heat exchanger
11
Countercurrent heat exchanger
  • Countercurrent heat exchange is important in
    controlling heat loss in many animals
  • Ex birds in legs
  • Ex flippers in seals, sea lions, and whales
  • Ex great white sharks

12
Behavior also affects body temperature
  • Behavioral roles in thermoregulation

13
Migration
14
Penguinshuddling
15
Elephants bathing
16
Dressing for the weather
17
Dressing for the weather
18
MMM warmth through.
sunbathing
19
Reduction of metabolic rate
Gray tree frog
20
Reduction of metabolic rate
  • Endothermy is expensive lots of food required
    to support ATP production
  • When food supplies are low, some birds and
    mammals may reduce metabolic rates
  • Bats exhibit torpor daily inactive during day
    and active at night
  • Ground squirrels hibernate during cold weather
  • A type of long-term torpor
  • Live on energy stored in body fat

21
Osmoregulation
  • Metabolic reactions require a balance of water
    and dissolved solutes
  • Ex Na, K, HCO3-
  • Net movement of water from hypotonic solution to
    hypertonic solution until equilibrium is reached
  • Most animals gain water from food drink
  • Also lose water by urinating, defecating,
    breathing, and sweating
  • Must balance the gain and loss of water
    dissolved solutes

22
Osmoregulation
  • Some aquatic animals are osmoconformers
  • However, some ion concentrations in their body
    fluids are different than that of seawater
  • Must actively transport ions into cells
  • Most animals are osmoregulators
  • Must use energy to control water loss/gain

23
Osmoregulation freshwater fish
24
Class Question
  • What would happen to a freshwater fish if it was
    placed into seawater?

25
Osmoregulation
  • Land animals gain water by drinking and eating
  • Lose from moist surfaces (lungs), urine, feces,
    and evaporation across the skin
  • The problem is preventing dehydration .hmmm what
    to do.
  • Insects waterproof exoskeletons
  • Land verts skin, protected eggs, behavior,
    kidney

26
Osmoregulation seasonal dehydration
The tardigrade
27
Class Questions
  • Why can a flock of geese stand on a frozen pond,
    while we could not stand on the pond without
    shoes?
  • What would happen to you if you went out into the
    desert for 2 days without water? Why?

28
Objectives Define comprehend
  • How and why a variety of animals dispose of
    nitrogenous wastes
  • Role of excretory system in homeostasis
  • Path of urine through body
  • Kidney functions
  • How water and solutes are removed from blood
  • Excretory system functions
  • Role of nephrons and collecting ducts
  • How filtrate becomes urine
  • Liver function
  • Alcohol metabolism

29
Nitrogenous wastes
  • Metabolism produces many toxic byproducts, for
    example those containing nitrogen
  • From breakdown of protein and nucleic acids
  • Must dispose of these wastes or be poisoned by
    them

30
Nitrogenous wastes
31
Nitrogenous wastes
  • Ammonia very toxic
  • soluble in water readily diffuses across
    membrane
  • Mainly aquatic organisms
  • Urea produced during protein breakdown in liver
    and transported by circulatory system to the
    kidneys
  • Mammals, most adult amphibians, some fish
  • Requires energy to produce

32
Nitrogenous wastes
  • Uric acid is a fairly non-toxic complex molecule
  • Insoluble in water
  • Avoid water-loss problem
  • Excreted as paste or dry powder
  • Requires energy to produce
  • Birds, insects, many reptiles

33
Excretory system
  • Plays a vital role in homeostasis
  • Forms and excretes urine
  • Regulating amount of water and salts in body
    fluids

34
Excretory system
35
Excretory system
  • Kidneys process 1,100 2000 L of blood/day
  • Kidneys extract 180 L of filtrate
  • Water, urea, and solutes (Na, K, HCO3-)
  • Kidneys refine the filtrate and concentrate the
    urea, returning most of the water and solutes to
    the blood
  • We excrete 1.5 L of urine/day

36
Excretory system
37
Excretory system
38
Excretory System
  • Blood pressure forces water and solutes from
    blood across wall of Bowmans capsule and into
    nephron
  • Creates filtrate and leaves behind blood cells
    and large molecules in capillaries
  • Rest of nephron
  • Refines filtrate
  • Distal tubule
  • Collects filtrate and empties into collecting
    duct
  • Filtrate then becomes urine

39
Key functions of the excretory system
40
Key functions of the excretory system
  • Filtration water and other small molecules enter
    nephron
  • Reabsorption water and solutes return to blood
  • Ex glucose, salt, amino acids
  • Secretion substances removed and added to
    filtrate
  • Ex excess H or K
  • Why H?

41
Key functions of the excretory system
  • Excretion urine the final product

42
From filtrate to urine
43
From filtrate to urine
  • Water conservation is a vital part of body fluid
    homeostasis for a terrestrial animal
  • Function of loop of Henle water reabsorption
  • Concentration of solutes in interstitial fluid is
    higher in medulla than in cortex of kidney
    creating a solute gradient
  • Water flows via osmosis to?
  • Medulla
  • Water carried to nearby blood capillaries
  • Maintains concentration gradient

44
From filtrate to urine
  • As filtrate moves through the medulla
  • More water reabsorbed
  • Filtrate collects, forming urine, where it is
    passed into the renal pelvis
  • Leaves via ureter to bladder and out the urethra

45
Class Question
  • Why can kidney failure lead to death?

46
The liver
47
The liver and homeostasis
  • Among other things, the liver prepares
    nitrogenous wastes for disposal by synthesizing
    urea from ammonia
  • Converts alcohol and other drugs into inactive
    products that the kidney can remove from the
    blood and excrete in urine

48
The livers various roles
  • Processes nutrients absorbed in small intestine
  • Modify and detoxify substances
  • Converts excess glucose to glycogen
  • Synthesize plasma proteins
  • Forms lipoproteins, which transport fats and
    cholesterol to body tissues

49
Alcohol metabolism and the livernot in book
  • Liver cells prefer fatty acids as fuel
  • However, if alcohol is present, alcohol will be
    processed first
  • Liver can metabolize ½ oz alcohol/hour
  • Allows fatty acids to accumulate in liver
  • Consistent heavy drinking can change cell
    structure
  • Results in fatty liver
  • First stage of liver deterioration
  • Final, irreversible stage is cirrhosis
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