Chapter 42: Internal Transport. Fig. 42-3 Heart Hemolymph in sinuses surrounding organs Heart Interstitial fluid Small branch vessels In each organ Blood.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Circulatory System.
Advertisements

Lecture #18 Date _____ Chapter 42 ~ Circulation and Gas Exchange.
The Circulatory System
Transport in Animals Gastrovascular cavities –flatworms and cnidarians Nutrients and gases can move by processes such as diffusion and active transport.
AP Biology Animal Form and function
BIOLOGY CONCEPTS & CONNECTIONS Fourth Edition Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Neil A. Campbell Jane B. Reece Lawrence.
The Circulatory System. Functions of the Circulatory System Stabilizes body temperature and pH to maintain homeostasis An organ system which distributes.
 A closed system of the heart and blood vessels › The heart pumps blood › Blood vessels allow blood to circulate to all parts of the body  The functions.
 How do simple organisms like jelly fish and flat worms exchange reactants and products of cellular respiration? ◦ Simple animals have a body wall that.
Circulation and Gas Exchange Chapter 42 (all)
Circulation and Gas Exchange
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Benjamin Cummings Circulatory and Respiratory Systems.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint Lectures for Biology: Concepts and Connections, Fifth Edition – Campbell,
Cardiovascular System
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings Cardiovascular System.
Circulation Chapter 23.
Chapter 42: Circulation and Gas Exchange 1.What is the function of the circulatory system? -Transport nutrients & O 2 to all cells -Transport metabolic.
excretory system eliminates metabolic waste
What Are The Major Features And Functions Of Circulatory Systems?
LE Capillary Red blood cell 15 µm Tissue cell Capillary Net fluid movement out INTERSTITIAL FLUID Net fluid movement in Blood pressure Osmotic pressure.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc.  Giraffes have –Very strong hearts –Higher blood pressure –Sinuses that function like check valves to lower pressure.
The problem How do we get nutrients and gases to every cell of the body?
Chapter 42 ~ Circulation and Gas Exchange
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture by Edward J. Zalisko PowerPoint Lectures for Campbell Biology: Concepts & Connections, Seventh Edition Reece, Taylor,
Circulatory System. Figure Transports materials throughout body: Nutrients Metabolic wastes Gases (O 2 & CO 2 ) Hormones [regulate body processes]
Part 1 Grade 8 Semester 1 Year
Circulatory System circulatory system circulatory system transports O 2 and nutrients to cells transports O 2 and nutrients to cells takes away CO 2 and.
Circulatory System Open circulatory system –Pump blood into an internal cavity called a hemocoel or sinuses Which bathe tissues with an oxygen and nutrient.
Cardiovascular System
CIRCULATION. Types of circulatory systems Diffusion – oxygen and carbon dioxide, based on body shape and size Gastrovascular cavities – distribution of.
BIOLOGY CONCEPTS & CONNECTIONS Fourth Edition Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Neil A. Campbell Jane B. Reece Lawrence.
Circulatory System Blood Lymphatic System. The Heart & Blood flow.
LECTURE PRESENTATIONS For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry, Michael L. Cain, Steven A. Wasserman, Peter V. Minorsky, Robert.
Comparative Circulatory System
Transportation systems in animals and plants
Principles of Biology BIOL 100C: Introductory Biology III The Circulatory System & Blood Dr. P. Narguizian Fall 2012.
Chapter 42 Circulatory System.
Warm-Up 1. (Ch. 41) List the locations where each of the 4 macromolecules are chemically digested. 2. (Ch. 41) Where do vertebrates store excess calories?
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint ® Lecture Presentations for Biology Eighth Edition Neil Campbell.
The Circulatory System Functions of the Circulatory System: To remove waste products of cell metabolism To circulate necessary materials to all cells (e.g.
STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF BLOOD © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.
The Mammalian Transport System
Period 3 Agenda SciD Murphy and Ehrlich CH 45 wrap up – skin and nails Ch 46 overview.
Circulation and Gas Exchange (42). Circular canal Radial canal Mouth (a) The moon jelly Aurelia, a cnidarian 5 cm Simple animals-- body wall that is only.
Chapter 23 Circulation 2.
6.2 The Transport System Readings Pg 216, 2-4.
The Circulatory System
THE CIRCULATORY SYSTEM I.THE CIRCULATORY SYSTEM IS AN INTERNAL TRANSPORT SYSTEM WITH 3 COMPONENTS: BLOOD IS A FLUID TISSUE COMPOSED OF WATER,
42 Circulation.
Capillary Function Capillaries in major organs are usually filled to capacity Blood supply varies in many other sites.
Circulatory System The circulatory system is the body’s highway system for transporting materials. Delivers oxygen to cells Take carbon dioxide away from.
Circulatory System The circulatory system is the body’s highway system for transporting materials. Delivers oxygen to cells Take carbon dioxide away from.
Circulation and Gas Exchange
Chapter 43 The Immune System.
Circulation and Gas Exchange
Cardiovascular system: Heart and blood vessels
Chapters Gas Exchange and Circulation
Circulatory System Function and Parts.
6.2 The Blood System.
Catalyst What are leukocytes? What do they do for your body?
6.2 The Blood System.
Circulation and Gas exchange
Warm-Up (Ch. 41) List the locations where each of the 4 macromolecules are chemically digested. (Ch. 41) Where do vertebrates store excess calories?
Chapter 42- Circulation Introduction The heart is a muscular pump that drives the circulation of blood throughout the body. The blood flows through a closed.
Cardiovascular and Circulatory System
Circulatory System Main Functions:
Chapter 42: Circulation and Gas Exchange
Chapter 23 Circulation.
Circulation & Gas Exchange
Circulation & Respiration Chapter 42
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 42: Internal Transport

Fig Heart Hemolymph in sinuses surrounding organs Heart Interstitial fluid Small branch vessels In each organ Blood Dorsal vessel (main heart) Auxiliary heartsVentral vessels (b) A closed circulatory system (a) An open circulatory system Tubular heart Pores

Fig Artery Ventricle Atrium Heart Vein Systemic capillaries Systemic circulation Gill circulation Gill capillaries

Fig Amphibians Lung and skin capillaries Pulmocutaneous circuit Atrium (A) Ventricle (V) Atrium (A) Systemic circuit Right Left Systemic capillaries Reptiles (Except Birds) Lung capillaries Pulmonary circuit Right systemic aorta Right Left systemic aorta Systemic capillaries AA V V Pulmonary circuit Systemic circuit RightLeft AA V V Lung capillaries Mammals and Birds

Fig Superior vena cava Pulmonary artery Capillaries of right lung Aorta Pulmonary vein Right atrium Right ventricle Inferior vena cava Capillaries of abdominal organs and hind limbs Pulmonary vein Left atrium Left ventricle Aorta Capillaries of left lung Pulmonary artery Capillaries of head and forelimbs

Fig Pulmonary artery Right atrium Semilunar valve Atrioventricular valve Right ventricle Left ventricle Atrioventricular valve Left atrium Semilunar valve Pulmonary artery Aorta

Fig Semilunar valves closed 0.4 sec AV valves open Atrial and ventricular diastole sec Atrial systole; ventricular diastole sec Semilunar valves open AV valves closed Ventricular systole; atrial diastole

Fig Signals spread throughout ventricles. 4 Purkinje fibers Pacemaker generates wave of signals to contract. 1 SA node (pacemaker) ECG Signals are delayed at AV node. 2 AV node Signals pass to heart apex. 3 Bundle branches Heart apex

Fig ArteryVein SEM 100 µm Endothelium Artery Smooth muscle Connective tissue Capillary Basal lamina Endothelium Smooth muscle Connective tissue Valve Vein Arteriole Venule Red blood cell Capillary 15 µm LM

Fig Plasma 55% ConstituentMajor functions Water Solvent for carrying other substances Ions (blood electrolytes) Osmotic balance, pH buffering, and regulation of membrane permeability Sodium Potassium Calcium Magnesium Chloride Bicarbonate Osmotic balance pH buffering Clotting Defense Plasma proteins Albumin Fibrinogen Immunoglobulins (antibodies) Substances transported by blood Nutrients (such as glucose, fatty acids, vitamins) Waste products of metabolism Respiratory gases (O 2 and CO 2 ) Hormones Separated blood elements Cellular elements 45% Cell typeFunctionsNumber per µL (mm 3 ) of blood Erythrocytes (red blood cells) 5–6 million Transport oxygen and help transport carbon dioxide Leukocytes (white blood cells) 5,000–10,000 Defense and immunity Basophil Neutrophil Eosinophil Lymphocyte Monocyte PlateletsBlood clotting 250,000– 400,000

Collagen fibers Platelet plug Platelet releases chemicals that make nearby platelets sticky Clotting factors from: Platelets Damaged cells Plasma (factors include calcium, vitamin K) ProthrombinThrombin FibrinogenFibrin 5 µm Fibrin clot Red blood cell Fig