Basic Principles of Animal Form and Function. Chapter 40

Similar documents
Form and Function. Physical Laws and Form. Chapter 40: Basic Principles of Animal Form and Function. AP Biology Fig Figs & 40.

Animal Form & Function Lecture 10 Winter 2014

Basic Principles of Animal Form and Function

Overview of Physiology & Homeostasis. Biological explanations Levels of organization Homeostasis

Slide 1 / Arrange the following in order from least complex to most complex: organ, tissue, cell, organism, organ system.

Physiology. Organization of the Body. Assumptions in Physiology. Chapter 1. Physiology is the study of how living organisms function

Organization of Vertebrate Body. Organization of Vertebrate Body

Levels of Organization. Monday, December 5, 16

SNC2D BIOLOGY 4/1/2013. TISSUES, ORGANS & SYSTEMS OF L Animal & Plant Tissues (P.42-45) Animal Tissues. Animal Tissues

Levels of Organization

UNIT 2- BODY ORGANIZATION AND HOMEOSTASIS M E L A N I E L O U L O U S I S

Specialized Cells, Tissues, Organs and Organ Systems. Chap 2, p. 67 Chap 9, p. 295 Chap 14, p

Introduction. The study of animal form and function is integrated by the common set of problems that all animals must solve.

UNIT 6 THE MUSCULAR SYSTEM

Department Curriculum and Assessment Outline

28.1. Levels of Organization. > Virginia standards

ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY Revised 11/2010

Tissues: - A group of cells similar in structure and performing a particular function forms a tissue.

Review. Watch the following video How Stuff Works - Cells video

Class IX Chapter 6 Tissues Science

SPRINGFIELD TECHNICAL COMMUNITY COLLEGE ACADEMIC AFFAIRS

Introduction Chpt 1. Study Slides

CURRICULUM MAP. TIME CONTENT PAGE REF. SKILLS ASSESSMENT/ACTIVITIES Day 1-3

INTRODUCTION Veterinary Physiology I Odd Semester 2015/2016. Division of Physiology Department of Anatomy, Physiology and Pharmacology FVM BAU

Physiology. Biol 219 Lec 1 Fall The Science of Body Function. Themes of Physiology. Themes of Physiology

Cells to systems. 1) Chemical Level All matter is a combination of atoms: - Oxygen - Carbon - Nitrogen - Hydrogen Make up 96% of total body chemistry

Growth & Development. Characteristics of Living Things. What is development? Movement. What is a cell?

Nerve cells have many branches that help them send signals throughout the body.

Anatomy & Physiology Standards and Benchmarks

NATIONAL REVIEW COURSE. Cells, Tissues, and Membranes

Physiology and Behaviour I. Dr Mike Wride School of Natural Sciences Zoology Department

Essential Question Content Skills Assessment Standards. Anatomical terms. Homeostatic mechanisms. Characteristics of Life. Requirements for life

Animal Adaptation REVIEW GAME

Chapter 6: Tissues. KEY CONCEPTS : [ *rating as per the significance of concept]

Chapter 8-9 Intro to Animals. Image from:

Bio 250 Anatomy & Physiology The Human Organism. Introduction to A & P. Why Anatomy & Physiology? Dr. Tom Rachow Rock-o Office: Agenstein Hall 201E

Chapter 1. The Human Organism 1-1

CHAPTER 9 BODY ORGANIZATION. Copyright 2007 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. 1

Endocrine Physiology. Introduction to Endocrine Principles

Biology 13A Lab #3: Cells and Tissues

Next Generation Science Standards Life Science Performance Expectations

What Is Biology? Biologists Study? The study of living things. Characteristics Classifications Interactions between organisms Health & Disease

Chapter 32 Intro to Animals. Image from:

The Human Body: An Orientation

LABETTE COMMUNITY COLLEGE BRIEF SYLLABUS. ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY, lecture and lab

Anatomy & Physiology Curriculum Map Date Content/Topics Objectives Activities/Assessments Aug. 7th- 21st

Introduction to Animal Diversity. Chapter 23.1, 23.2 and additional

BIOL Anatomy and Physiology I ( version L )

VOCABULARY. Cell Membrane Nucleus Cell Wall Chloroplast Vacuole Tissue Organ Organ System

GENERAL INFORMATION. Number of One credit (1)

REVISION BOOKLET MIDTERM EXAM FIRST SEMESTER 2018 SCIENCE 6

Module A BODY PLAN & ORGANIZATION

Anatomy and Physiology. Science Curriculum Framework

Broken Arrow Public Schools Physiology Objectives

Plant Tissues. Parenchyma Collenchyma Sclerenchyma

Fundamentals of Neurosciences. Smooth Muscle. Dr. Kumar Sambamurti 613-SEI; ;

Sioux Falls School District Anatomy and Physiology Holes Anatomy and Physiology Authors: Shier, Butler, and Lewis Glencoe/ McGraw hill

4. Which of the following organelles digests waste using hydrolytic enzymes:

CYTOLOGY & HISTOLOGY THE STUDY OF CELLS AND TISSUES

Fairfield Public Schools Science Curriculum Human Anatomy and Physiology: Brains, Bones and Brawn

Intercellular Communication. Department of Physiology School of Medicine University of Sumatera Utara

Bulk Transport. Active Transport. cell drinking. Highly specific! cell eating

Biology B. There are no objectives for this lesson.

Cell Structure: Organelles. Unit Seventh Grade

Education Transformation Office (ETO) 8 th Grade Unit #4 Assessment

East Penn School District Curriculum and Instruction

Do NOT write on this test. Thank you!

Chapter 1: Introduction to Anatomy and Physiology

Chapter 6: Tissues Science

Name Period Date Science 7R - Marking Period 3 Review SCIENTIFIC METHOD 1. What are the steps of the scientific method?

Nonvascular Plants mosses, liverworts and hornworts are nonvascular plants. These lack vascular tissue which is a system of tubes that transport

What Is an Animal? Animals come in many shapes, forms, and sizes. About 98 percent of all animals are invertebrates. The Kingdom Animalia

12-The Nervous System. Taft College Human Physiology

7-4 Notes Diversity of Cellular Life

Biology September 2015 Exam One FORM G KEY

Biology September 2015 Exam One FORM W KEY

Sensory and Motor Mechanisms Chapter 50. Sensory Pathways. Transmission. Perception 11/6/2017

TISSUE. A) Types. (i)

BIOL 1030 Introduction to Biology: Organismal Biology. Spring 2011 Section A. Steve Thompson:

Architectural Pattern of an animal. Chapter 9

Resources. Visual Concepts. Chapter Presentation. Copyright by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved.

Biology. Biology. Slide 1 of 30. End Show. Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall

Year 7 - Cells Summary Notes

tissues are made of cells that work together, organs are )

18. Which body system is needed for the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide? A. Respiratory B. Integumentary C. Digestive D. Urinary 19.

Modesto Junior College Course Outline of Record AP 150

Unit 1: Cells, Tissues, Organs, and Systems

Advanced Anatomy and Physiology

East Poinsett County School District Anatomy and Physiology Curriculum Guide Revised August 2011

1. Why Dissect. Why are frogs a good model to use when studying the digestive system (as well as other systems)?

BIO 5099: Molecular Biology for Computer Scientists (et al) Lecture 19: Eukaryotic genes & Multicellular Organisms. Gene Families

SCIENCE REVISION BOOKLET MID SEMESTER

THE CELL THEORY (R+R+R+E+G+N+T+S) 3).

JEFFERSON COLLEGE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY

Primitively there is a pair of ganglia per body segment but there has been progressive fusion of ganglia both within and between segments.

PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 9 MUSCLE TISSUE Fall 2016

How Does Temperature Affect Daphnia Heart Rate? Student Study Guide

3. Structure, Function, and Genetics of Plants and Animals

Overview Organization: Central Nervous System (CNS) Peripheral Nervous System (PNS) innervate Divisions: a. Afferent

Applegate: The Anatomy and Physiology Learning System, 3 rd Edition

Transcription:

Basic Principles of Animal Form and Function Chapter 40

Form and Function Anatomy- biological form of an organism. Physiology- biological function.

Size and Shape Development of body plan and shape is programmed by specific genes. Ex: homeotic genes, HOX genes

Exchange with Environment Interstitial Fluid- fills spaces between cells of most mammals- helps exchange fluids between cells. Circulatory Fluid (blood)- also enables cells to obtain nutrients and get rid of wastes.

d

SA:V

sd

Organization of Body Plans Cells Tissues Organs - Organ Systems

Major Tissue Types Epithelial Connective Muscle Nervous

Epithelial Tissue Epithelial Tissue- covers the outside of the body and lines organs and cavities within the body. Function as a barrier against mechanical injury, pathogens, and fluid loss.

Connective Tissue Connective Tissue- cells scattered in an extracellular matrix. Holds tissue and organs together and in place.

Muscle Tissue Skeletal Muscle- attached to bones by tendons. Striated. Contractile units called sarcomeres are formed by the fusion of many muscle fibers, thus cells contain multiple nuclei. Responsible for voluntary movements. Smooth Muscle- lacks striations. Found in walls of digestive tract, bladder, arteries, etc. Responsible for involuntary movements. Cardiac Muscle- forms the contractile wall of the heart. Striated. Fibers connected with intercalated disks that help synchronize muscle contraction.

k Muscle Tissue

Nervous Tissue Nervous Tissue- functions in the receipt, processing, and transmission of information. Nerve cells = neurons; supporting cells = glial cellsboth work together to transmit nerve impulses.

Warm Up Exercise 1. What are the four major tissue types? 2. What are the three types of muscle tissues?

Communication and Signaling Two major systems are responsible for communication between cells: Endocrine System- signaling molecules called hormones are released into the blood stream by endocrine cells. Nervous System- neurons transmit signals- called nerve impulses

Communication and Signaling Endocrine- signal travels everywhere via blood- response is limited to cells that have a receptor for the specific hormone. Transmission may take several seconds, but duration may last hours. Nervous- signal travels along axon to specific location. Transmission is extremely fast and duration is extremely short. Only four types of cells can receive nerve impulses- other neurons, muscle, endocrine and exocrine cells.

Communication and Signaling Endocrine- gradual changes that affect the entire body. Ex: growth and development, reproduction, metabolic processes, digestion. Nervous- directs immediate and rapid response to the environment. Ex: controls fast locomotion and behavior.

Regulating and Conforming Regulator- uses internal mechanisms to control internal change in the face of external fluctuation. Conformer- allows its internal condition to change in accordance with external changes in the variable.

Homeostasis Homeostasis- a constant internal environment. Includes ph, temperature, salinity, fluids, gases, nutrients, etc.

Feedback Control and Homeostasis Negative Feedback- reduces the stimulus. Brings the body back to normal and helps restore homeostasis. Positive Feedback- amplifies the stimulus. Not typically involved in homeostasis.

Alterations in Homeostasis Regulated Changes: puberty, menstrual cycle, etc. Circadian Rhythmphysiological changes that occur approx. every 24 hours.

Alterations to Homeostasis Acclimatization- gradual process in which an animal adjust to changes in its external environment.

Exit Slip Suppose you are standing at the edge of a cliff and suddenly slip- you barely manage to keep your balance and avoid falling. As your heart races, you feel a burst of energy; due in part to the surge of blood into dilated vessels in your muscles and an upward spike in the level of glucose in your blood. Why might you expect that this fight-or-flight response requires bot the nervous and endocrine systems?

Warm Up Exercise 3. Give three major differences between endocrine and nervous system signaling. 4. Explain the difference between a regulator and conformer.

Thermoregulation Thermoregulation- the process by which animals maintain body temperature within their optimal range. Endothermic- warmed mostly be heat generated by metabolism. Maintain a stable body temperature even in the face of large fluctuations in the environment. Ex: birds and mammals Ectothermic- gain most of their heat from external sources. Need to conserve less food for energy, can tolerate larger fluctuates in internal temperature. Many adjust temperature behaviorally (finding shade or sun). Ex: amphibians, lizards, snakes, turtles, many fishes, and most invertebrates

Variation in Temperature Poikilotherm- variable body temperature Homeotherm- constant body temperature

Heat Loss and Gain Organisms exchange heat using 4 methods: radiation, evaporation, convection, and conduction. Heat is always transferred from the higher temperature to the colder temperature.

Heat Loss and Gain Integumentary System- outer covering of body (skin, hair, nails, and claws/hooves). Helps with thermoregulation by providing insulation. Brown fat- specialized for rapid heat production Circulatory System- provides a route for heat flow and plays a significant role in thermoregulation. Vasoconstriction vs. Vasodilation

Countercurrent Exchange Countercurrent Exchange- the transfer of heat between fluids (mostly blood) that are flowing in opposite directions to maximize the rate of heat exchange.

Thermoregulation Thermoregulation is controlled by a region in of the brain called the hypothalamus.

Energy and Metabolism Bioenergetics- the overall flow and transformation of energy in an animal. Metabolic Rate/Metabolism- sum of all the energy used in a chemical reactions over time. Basal Metabolic Rate- minimum metabolic rate of a nongrowing endotherm at rest, with an empty stomach and not experiencing stress. Standard Metabolic Rate- rate of a fasting, nonstressed ectotherm at rest at a particular temperature. Torpor- a physiological state of decreased activity and metabolism. An adaptation that enables animals to save energy while avoiding difficult and dangerous situations.