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Thermoregulation Osmoregulation Excretion
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Regulators & Conformers
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Regulation of Body Temperature Direct transfer of heat Transfer of heat by air or water movement Emission of electromagnetic waves Removal of heat from the surface of a liquid
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Endotherms: High metabolic rate to maintain a high and very stable internal temperature Ectotherms: Low metabolic rate, body temperature determined by environment
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Thermoregulation 1.Adjusting the rate of heat exchange between the animal and its surroundings Vasodilation/vasoconstriction Countercurrent heat exchanger 2.Cooling by evaporative loss (skin, breathing) 3.Behavioral responses (basking, hibernation, migration) 4.Changing the rate of metabolic heat production (endotherms only)
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Countercurrent heat exchangers Bird legs Marine mammal flippers
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ENDOTHERMY Shivering Movement Brown fat Insulation (hair, fat, feathers) Goose bumps Vasoconstriction Vasodilation Blubber Sweat glands Panting
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FISHES Most conformers Endothermic fishes circulatory adaptations
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Invertebrates aquatic – thermoconformers; terrestrial – behavioral endothermic – many flying insects
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Human Thermoregulation
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Torpor – physiological state (low activity) Hibernation – long term torpor (winter) Estivation – summer torpor
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WATER BALANCE & WASTE DISPOSAL Osmoregulation – management of body’s water content & solute composition Contractile vacuoles Transport epithelium – ◦ layer(s) of specialized cells that regulate solute movement ◦ move specific solutes in controlled amounts in particular directions ◦ joined by impermeable tight junctions forming a barrier at the tissue-environment boundary
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Salt secreting glands in marine birds Blood flow and salt flow counter current Note tight junctions in epithelium
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Ammonia – very soluble, very toxic, aquatic species Nitrogenous wastes correlated to phylogeny & habitat Urea – produced in the liver, land animals, less toxic, conserves water Uric acid – largely insoluble, excreted as semi solid paste, minimal water loss, birds & reptiles
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EXCRETORY SYSTEMS Filtration – pressure filtering body fluid, largely nonselective, produces filtrate Reabsorption – reclaims valuable substances by active transport Secretion – extraction of toxins & excess ions from blood Excretion – removal from body
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Flame-Bulb System of a Planarian
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Metanephridia of an Earthworm
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Malpighian Tubules in Insects
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HUMAN EXCRETORY SYSTEM
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www.bioengineering.canterbury.ac.nz/graphics
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http://www.lakemichigancollege.edu/liberal/bio/anat/urin.html
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NEPHRON – functional unit of a kidney Glomerulus – ball of capillaries, very porous Bowman’s capsule – cup shaped swelling surrounding glomerulus Filtration – blood pressure provides the force, nonselective: glucose, aa, salts, ions, urea, H 2 O etc. Filtrate (essentially lymph) pathway – PCT, Loop of Henle, DCT, collecting duct Cortical nephrons (cortex) – 80% of human’s Juxtamedullary nephrons – extend into medulla Blood vessels – a fferent arteriole, efferent arteriole, peritubular capillaries, vasa recta
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1. PROXIMAL TUBULE Reabsorption: of salt (most imp) Active or passive Nutrients Bicarbonate ions Active Passive Secretion: H + ions (pH) Ammonia (pH) Drugs, poisons Epithelium: Exterior side smaller surface area, minimizes leakage
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2. DESCENDING LIMB - LOOP OF HENLE Active Passive Reabsorption of H 2 O continues Epithelium not very permeable to salts Interstitial fluid – osmolarity ↑ as fluid moves down from cortex to medulla
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Active Passive 3. ASCENDING LIMB - LOOP OF HENLE Transport epithelium permeable to salt NOT water Thin segment – passive Thick segment – active Filtrate becomes more dilute as it moves into cortex
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Active Passive 4. DISTAL TUBULE Secretion & reabsorption Regulation of: K + (secretion) and NaCl (reabsorption) pH regulation (H + & HCO 3 - )
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5. COLLECTING DUCT Active Passive Carries filtrate through medulla into pelvis Actively reabsorbs NaCl Epithelium (cortex) permeable to H 2 O but NOT salt, urea High conc. of urea causes some to diffuse out
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Concentration of urine in the human kidney based on urea & salt
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Concentration of urine in the human kidney based on urea & salt
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Concentration of urine in the human kidney based on urea & salt
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REGULATION OF KIDNEY Antidiuretic hormone (ADH) – DCT & collecting duct Juxtaglomerular apparatus (JGA) – near afferent arteriole, responds to low blood pressure or volume Angiotensin II – activated by renin, constricts arterioles, reabsorption of NaCl in PCT, triggers release of aldosterone Aldosterone – adrenal medulla, DCT reabsorption of NaCl Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) Atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) – oppose RAAS
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Hormonal control of the kidney by negative feedback circuits ADH enhances fluid retention by making the kidneys reclaim more water RAAS – JGA responds to in blood pressure/volume
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Vampire bat excretes a)dilute urine while feeding (shedding weight for flight home) b)concentrated urine while roosting
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