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Chapter 5.5 Which Way Will Water Move? AP Biology Fall 2010
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Bell Ringer
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Objectives Analyze the 3 conditions possible when describing the tonicity of a solution Understand what osmosis is Describe the effects of fluid pressure
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Movement of Water Bulk Flow: mass movement of one or more substances in response to pressure, gravity, or another external force – Ex. Running faucet, Niagara Falls, beating heart and blood, sap flowing in trees
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Movement of Water Osmosis: the passive movement (diffusion) of water across a differentially permeable membrane from high to low concentration – In response to solute concentration gradients, pressure gradients, or both
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Movement of Water Ex. Osmosis – If a bag containing a sugar solution is placed in pure water, the water will diffuse inward (higher to lower)
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Effects of Tonicity Tonicity: refers to the relative solute concentrations of two fluids – Extracellular fluid and cytoplasmic fluid Most free-living cells counteract shift in tonicity by selectively transporting solutes across the cell membrane
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Effects of Tonicity Hypotonic Solution – Has a lower concentration of solutes than the fluid in the cell – Water moves inward – Cells immersed in it may swell and even burst – Ex. 2% sucrose cell, immersed in 1L distilled water
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Effects of Tonicity Hypertonic Solution – Has a greater concentration of solutes than the fluid in the cell – Water moves out – Cells immersed in it may shrivel – Ex. 2% sucrose cell, immersed in 1L of 10% sucrose solution
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Effects of Tonicity Isotonic Solution – Has the same concentration of solutes as the fluid in the cell – Water moves in and out in equal proportions – Immersion in it causes no net movement of water, cell shape stays the same – Ex. 2% sucrose cell, immersed in 1L of 2% sucrose solution
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Effects of Fluid Pressure Cells are either dependent on relatively constant (isotonic) environments or are adapted to hypotonic and hypertonic ones
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Effects of Fluid Pressure Hydrostatic pressure: force directed against a membrane by a fluid – Greater the solute concentration, greater the hydrostatic pressure it exerts – Plants = is called turgor pressure
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Effects of Fluid Pressure Osmotic pressure: of any fluid is one measure of the tendency of water to follow its water concentration gradient and move into that fluid – Can prevent further increase in the volume of the solution When hydrostatic pressure and osmotic pressure are equal in magnitude, osmosis stops completely
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Effects of Fluid Pressure When plants lose water there is shrinkage of the cytoplasm – Plasmolysis
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Review 1.T/F Osmosis is the diffusion of water across a semi permeable membrane from an area of high to low concentration. 2.T/F A cell that is placed in a hypotonic solution will most likely shrivel up. 3.T/F Turgor pressure refers to the shrinkage of the cytoplasm.
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Answers 1.True 2.False 3.False
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