animal form and function

41
ANIMAL FORM AND FUNCTION Circulation and Gas Exchange Refer to pg 237-243 in Holtzclaw, Ch 42 in Campbell and media resources Also refer to AP Lab 10

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Animal Form and Function. Circulation and Gas Exchange Refer to pg 237-243 in Holtzclaw , Ch 42 in Campbell and media resources Also refer to AP Lab 10. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Animal Form and Function

ANIMAL FORM AND FUNCTIONCirculation and Gas ExchangeRefer to pg 237-243 in Holtzclaw, Ch 42 in Campbell and media resources

Also refer to AP Lab 10

Page 2: Animal Form and Function

LEARNING GOAL: HOW DO ANIMALS EXCHANGE GASES AND TRANSPORT THEM INTERNALLY? WHAT ARE VARIOUS STRUCTURE/FUNCTION EXAMPLES ACROSS THE ANIMAL KINGDOM?

Page 3: Animal Form and Function

LEARNING INTENTIONSYou must know: The circulatory vessels, heart chambers, and

route of mammalian circulation. How red bloods cells (RBCs) demonstrate the

relationship of structure to function. The general characteristics of a respiratory

surface. The pathway a molecule of oxygen takes

from the air until it is picked up by the hemoglobin of a red blood cell.

Page 4: Animal Form and Function

THE CIRCULATORY VESSELS, HEART CHAMBERS, AND ROUTE OF MAMMALIAN CIRCULATION. You must exchange gas, wastes, and

nutrients at the cellular level by diffusion!

Two solutions: 1) Keep all cells in contact with environment

Gastrovascular Cavity 2) Move fluid around to tissues/cells for

exchange Circulatory System

Page 5: Animal Form and Function

Gastrovascular Cavity

Page 6: Animal Form and Function

WHAT ARE THE THREE COMPONENTS OF A CIRCULATORY SYSTEM? Circulatory System

Page 7: Animal Form and Function

WHAT ARE THE THREE COMPONENTS OF A CIRCULATORY SYSTEM? Blood (Circulatory Fluid) Vessels (Tubes) Heart (Pump)

Page 8: Animal Form and Function

IN CLOSED CIRCULATION YOU HAVE: Arteries –

Capillaries –

Veins –

Page 9: Animal Form and Function

IN CLOSED CIRCULATION YOU HAVE: Arteries – carry blood away from heart

Thick, lots of smooth muscle Arterioles are smaller

Capillaries – Gas/Nutrient/Waste Exchange Microscopic Walls are one-cell layer thick (significance?)

Veins – carry blood back to the heart Have valves to prevent backflow Venules are smaller

The heart has atria and ventricles

Page 10: Animal Form and Function
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TRY THIS! TRUE OR FALSE?Capillary beds:

A. Are the site of nutrient and oxygen delivery to tissues

B. Have a total cross-sectional area much smaller than the total cross-sectional area of major arteries

C. Join arterioles and venules

Page 12: Animal Form and Function

TRY THIS! TRUE OR FALSE?Capillary beds:

A. Are the site of nutrient and oxygen delivery to tissues TRUE!

B. Have a total cross-sectional area much smaller than the total cross-sectional area of major arteries FALSE!

C. Join arterioles and venules TRUE!

Page 13: Animal Form and Function

VARIATIONS!

Page 14: Animal Form and Function

VARIATIONS!

Page 15: Animal Form and Function

TAKE A MOMENT TO READ AND UNDERSTAND THE PATH OF CIRCULATION ON PAGE 239 IN HOLTZCLAW

Page 16: Animal Form and Function

THE CARDIAC CYCLE – SYSTOLE (CONTRACTION) AND DIASTOLE (RELAXATION)

Page 17: Animal Form and Function

THE CARDIAC CYCLE – READ HEART RATE ON PAGE 240 IN HOLTZCLAW

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BLOOD PRESSURE: READ 42.2 ON PAGE 240 IN HOLTZCLAW Analyze the graphs

Page 23: Animal Form and Function

BLOOD PRESSURE What happens

to cross-sectional surface area, velocity, and pressure as you move through the circulatory system?

Page 24: Animal Form and Function

ACTIVITY: MEASURING BLOOD PRESSURE! Experimental, not diagnostic!!!

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LEARNING INTENTIONSDo you know? The circulatory vessels, heart chambers, and

route of mammalian circulation.

Page 29: Animal Form and Function

LEARNING INTENTIONSYou must know: The circulatory vessels, heart chambers, and

route of mammalian circulation. How red bloods cells (RBCs)

demonstrate the relationship of structure to function.

The general characteristics of a respiratory surface.

The pathway a molecule of oxygen takes from the air until it is picked up by the hemoglobin of a red blood cell.

Page 30: Animal Form and Function

RED BLOOD CELLS: STRUCTURE/FUNCTION Biconcave disks

Why? 250 million Hb/RBC No nuclei!

Why? No mitochondria!

Why? Produced from stem

cells in bone marrow (as are all blood cells)

Page 31: Animal Form and Function

RED BLOOD CELLS: STRUCTURE/FUNCTION Biconcave disks

More surface area

250 mill Hb/RBC No nuclei!

More room for Hb No mitochondria!

O2 not used up Produced from stem

cells in bone marrow (as are all blood cells)

Page 32: Animal Form and Function

THE GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS OF A RESPIRATORY SURFACE Respiratory surface (skin, gills, tracheae,

lungs) are: Moist High surface area/volume ratio (folding,

branching) Closely associated with vascular system of large

animals

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BREATHING

Page 39: Animal Form and Function

CONTROL Sense carbon

dioxide and hydrogen ion

Why hydrogen ion? Chemistry of

carbon dioxide

Page 40: Animal Form and Function

HEMOGLOBIN Globular protein

Subunits? Where is it made?

Can change its affinity for oxygen by slightly changing shape (Bohr Shift)

Can carry oxygen, carbon dioxide, or hydrogen ions!

Carbon dioxide usually carried as bicarbonate ions

Page 41: Animal Form and Function

TO DO: Read Holtzclaw and do all

activities in chapter 42 media resources (interactive animations)

Do you know? The circulatory vessels, heart

chambers, and route of mammalian circulation.

How red bloods cells (RBCs) demonstrate the relationship of structure to function.

The general characteristics of a respiratory surface.

The pathway a molecule of oxygen takes from the air until it is picked up by the hemoglobin of a red blood cell.

BioFlix!!