Excretory System. Osmoregulation & Excretion Osmoregulation is important in homeostasis. Hyperosmotic Hyposmotic Isoosmotic Excretion helps in maintaining.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
EXCRETION. Homeostasis  To understand excretion, we need to understand homeostasis –
Advertisements

Excretion. Why? Nitrogen Waste Elimination Extra amino acids (protein) cannot be stored in the body. Amino acids that are not needed immediately are.
Regulating The Internal Environment Ch. 44. The Excretory System Osmoregulation: management of the body’s water content & solute composition Controlled.
HUMAN ORGANS OF EXCRETION. LUNGS  Excrete carbon dioxide and water  These are the wastes of cellular respiration.
REGULATION Nervous & Excretory Systems
THE EXCRETORY SYSTEM Chapter 4 Section 3 Pages
Excretory System o. Body Functions Remember: Toxins broken down in the liver end up in the blood. The cells receive nutrients form the blood and produce.
Homeostasis the steady-state physiological condition of the body Ability to regulate the internal environment important for proper functioning of cells.
Water Balance & Excretion
Urinary System.
The Urinary System Chapter 37.3.
Excretory System.
Water Balance & Excretion
Excretory: Disposal & Osmoregulation
Waste Removal & the Human Urinary System
Animal Physiology – Osmoregulation & Excretion (Lecture Version) Chapter 44.
Excretory System By Katie Ust. function  Rid of waste, chemical build up, and useless cell byproducts  Maintain balance.
Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation active regulation of the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells osmotic pressure = pressure resulting.
11.3 The kidney Objectives Define excretion.
The Excretory System How Our Body Eliminates Cellular Wastes.
How Our Body Eliminates Cellular Wastes. Excretion When proteins are broken down into amino acids, during digestion, they travel to the liver to be stored.
Excretion AP Biology Unit 6.
Osmoregulation Chapter 44.
Controlling the Internal Environment Chapter 40. The Big Picture The excretory system is a regulatory system that helps to maintain homeostasis within.
How does the body release waste and maintain homeostasis? The Excretory System.
Excretion: Disposal of Nitrogenous Wastes ammonia is too toxic to be stored land animals must dispose of Nitrogen in different form: Urea or Uric Acid.
Chapter 38: Excretory System. Functions of the Excretory System a. Collect water and filter body fluids b. Remove and concentrate waste products from.
Excretory System ‘Urine’ Good Hands.
Osmoregulation The process by which animals control solute concentrations and balance water gain and loss.
Osmoregulation and Excretion Water Balance and Waste Disposal Excretory Systems.
OSMOREGULATION AND EXCRETION. Key Concepts  Osmoregulation balances the uptake and loss of water and solutes  An animal’s nitrogenous wastes reflect.
Comparative Anatomy: Animal Body Systems: Excretory System
The process by which animals control solute concentrations and balance water gain and loss.
Kidneys and Excretory System. How Urination works htmhttp://health.howstuffworks.com/adam htm.
The Excretory System Excretion- The process by which the waste of cellular metabolism are removed Excretory organs regulate the chemical makeup of blood.
+ Excretory System By the end of this lesson on excretion you should be able to: 1) Describe the organs that make up the excretory system 2) Explain.
Urinary System: The Excretion of Waste. Kidneys: Structure and Function  The urinary system is made up of two kidneys, a pair of ureters, the urinary.
 Epithelial tissues  Connective Tissues  Nervous Tissues  Muscle tissues.
Excretion – Section Excretion n Process that rids the body of substances: –toxic chemicals –excess water –salts –carbon dioxide n Maintains osmotic.
Vertebarate Excretory systems. zExcretory systems regulate the chemical composition of body fluids by removing metabolic wastes and retaining the proper.
THE EXCRETORY SYSTEM. Function Removes waste products from the blood Cells produce wastes which move out of the cells and into the blood by diffusion.
The Excretory System. Function of the Excretory System To eliminate wastes products from the body To eliminate wastes products from the body.
BIO 391- The Excretory System The Structure and Function of the Kidney.
Excretion CAPE Biology Unit 2. What is Excretion?  Excretion is the process by which waste products of metabolism and other non- useful substances are.
EXCRETORY SYSTEM. Excretion Excretion: the process by which metabolic wastes and excess substances are removed from an organism.
OSMOREGULATION AND EXCRETION Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc.
Excretion removal of metabolic waste Protein and nucleic acid metabolism  nitrogen containing compounds does.
The Excretory System. STRUCTURES  Kidneys – filter blood of wastes  Ureter – tube leading to bladder  Urinary bladder – smooth muscle bag that stores.
Principles of Biology BIOL 100C: Introductory Biology III The Excretory System Dr. P. Narguizian Fall 2012.
Waste Removal & the Human Urinary System Sections 3.7 – 3.8 Bio 391
The Excretory System SBI 4U. The Importance of Excreting Wastes to maintain life processes, the body must eliminate harmful waste products excess proteins.
What is Excretion? Excretion is the process of removing cellular wastes. The term excretion refers specifically to the elimination of wastes produced by.
Excretory System Notes
Aim: How does our Body’s Excretory System Maintain Bodily Homeostasis? DO NOW 1.Describe the functions of three components to your blood. 2.Why does your.
34.3 Excretory System Functions of the Excretory System  The excretory system removes toxins and wastes from the body.  Regulates the amount of fluid.
Urinary System Ch. 35. Urinary systems Helps maintain homeostasis – Maintains water balance Either blood or interstitial fluid is filtered, removing water.
Excretion.
The Excretory System Chapter 45. An animal’s nitrogenous wastes are related to its body type and habitat The metabolism of protein and nucleic acids produces.
Lesson Overview 30.4 The Excretory System.
Homeostasis – “keeping things in balance”
REGULATION Reminder… Regulation within animal systems requires maintaining homeostasis- the ability of the body or a cell to seek and maintain a stable.
Water Balance & Excretion
Homeostasis – “keeping things in balance”
Excretory System ‘Urine Good Hands’.
Ice Man Climbed Mt. Everest in shorts!
Chapter 44- Osmoregulation and Excretion
Chapter 44- Osmoregulation and Excretion
Bozeman Osmoregulation - 197
REGULATION Reminders…
Osmoregulation and Excretion
Presentation transcript:

Excretory System

Osmoregulation & Excretion Osmoregulation is important in homeostasis. Hyperosmotic Hyposmotic Isoosmotic Excretion helps in maintaining ionic & PH balance. The excretory system of all vertebrates have tubules specialized in excretion called nephrons.

Excretion Simple organisms e.g Paramecium  contractile vacuole Invertebrate animals e.g earthworm  metanephridia grasshoper  malphighian tubules N.B: Vertebrates have a backbone or a spinal column a.k.a vertebral column (e.g mammals,reptiles, amphibians, birds, sharks etc) Invertebrates do not have a backbone or spine a.k.a vertebral column (e.g insects, worms,snails, crabs)

The human Excretory System

Kidney & Urinary System Functions: 1- Maitain water content 2- Eliminate toxins & unwanted byproducts (ammonia) 3-Maintain proper body PH.

Questions-Activity Q 1. Describe 2 main functions of the kidney.

Answer: -Elimination of wastes, regulation of PH and water balance

Q2. what deamination and why is it important?

Removal of amino group from an organic compound is deamination. It is important because many humans consume high protein diets which means the liver needs to convert these proteins into carbohydrates through deamination.

Q3. How does formation of urea prevent poisoning?

Answer: Because deamination creates a byproduct ammonia which is poisonous. 2 molecules of ammonia combine with a carbon dioxide to form urea which is x less toxic than ammonia. Animals can store urea for short time in their body, which permits controlled excretion in their urine.

Q4. Fish are able to excrete ammonia continuously from their gills. Explain why birds & mammals cannot continuously remove toxic waste.

The waste product is urine in humans and birds instead of ammonia. Urine would have to be excreted from body continuously with makes it difficult for land animals to survive because fluids would have to be continuously replaced in order to maintain homeostasis.

Kidney & Urinary System When a.a are deaminated in liver it releases ammonia. Mammals convert ammonia to urea (2 ammonia+ 1 CO2) Goes into blood to kidney to be eliminated as urine. Kidney  ureter  urinary bladder  urethra

Nephrons Blood is filtered by the kidney at a rate of 1.2 l/min Urine formation depends on 3 things: 1- Filtration 2- Reabsorption 3- Secretion

Kidney

Urine Formation Activity Pg

Nephron

Questions- Activity 1- Why is it beneficial to have two kidneys rather than one? 2- Explain the function of a nephron 3- Athletes undergo random urine testing for drugs. Describe the pathway of substances such as drugs through the urinary system from the time they enter glomerulus to the time they excrete urine.