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Controlling the temperature of the body
   Endotherms                   Ectotherms
     Generate heat through        Absorb heat from the
      metabolic activity            surroundings
     Eg. humans, birds            Use behaviours to maintain a
                                    constant body temp
                                   Eg fish, reptiles




                                   Both the gecko and the scorpion are at the same
                                 temperature as the air surrounding them. Notice the
                              difference between these cold-blooded creatures and the
                                        warm-blooded humans holding them.
   Endotherms and Ectotherms can be further classified
    into two groups:
    Homeotherms                                  Poikilotherms
    Animals that can maintain a                  Animals that cannot control their body
    relatively constant body temp                temp. Body temp changes with the
    Eg. mammals, some insects,                   temp of the surroundings. Eg fish and
    birds                                        reptiles




                     Mammals can use up
                     to 80% of the energy
                      obtained from food
                      simply to maintain    In the image to the left, the lizard is just above room temperature,
                      body temperature.     being warmed by the human hand holding it. To warm up lizards will
                                            seek a sunny area and bask in warm sunlight, as in the image to the
                                            right.
   Any organism
    that is hotter
    than its
    surrounding
    may lose heat
   Heat can be
    lost through:
       Radiation
       Conduction
       Convection
       Evaporation
 Conduction – transfer of heat from a hotter to
  cooler object which is it in contact with
 Convection – transfer of heat by warm air or water
  rising and being replaced by cool air or water
 Evaporation – as water vaporises it takes heat with
  it form the body –cooling effect
 Radiation – transfer of heat by means of infra-red
  waves
•   An example of
    how the human
    body regulates
         body
     temperature.
   Adaptations allow an organism to survive in a
    range of environmental conditions that exist in
    their habitat.
   Structural – body shape
   Behavioural – what the animals does
   Physiological – Internal metabolic functions
   There are a number of adaptations animals have
    to be able to successfully regulate their
    temperature
Increase Body Temperature                             Decrease Body Temperature
Vasoconstriction: Arterioles get smaller to reduce    Vasodilation: arterioles dilate (widen) so more
blood going to skin, keeping the core warm.           blood enters the skin capillaries and heat is lost.

Shivering: Rapid contraction and relaxing of          Sweating: Glands secrete sweat which removes
skeletal muscles. Heat produced by respiration.       heat when water evaporates.

Piloerection: Hairs on skin stand up (trapping more   Pilorelaxation: Hairs on skin flatten (trapping less
air) and decreasing heat loss.                        air) and increasing heat loss.

Curling up: reduces heat loss, decreases surface      Stretching Out: By opening up, the body has a
area.                                                 larger surface area.

Huddling together: animals group together and         Burrowing : To avoid heat of day
share body heat., thus reducing heat loss.

Hibernation: When an animal cannot cope with
conditions animals undergoes dormancy

Basking: take in heat from surroundings

Fat: insulates against heat loss.

Fur: Traps warm air to maintain heat

             Some arctic animals can also have antifreeze substances in their blood
             to prevent cell damage due to extreme cold!
Maintaining a Water Balance
   All animals have some mechanism to regulate water balance.

   They balance water uptake vs. water loss and regulate solute
    concentration within cells and tissues

   The fluid in cells, blood and tissue fluids contains a variety of
    solutes dissolved in water. This fluid is the medium in which
    everything happens – chemical reactions, transport of nutrients,
    gases and wastes.

   Water is lost continually from the body in urine and faeces,
    through our sweat glands and tear ducts.

   Osmoreceptors in the hypothalamus detect changes in the
    water concentration in the blood and body tissues
Water Balance in Two Different Land Mammals
        Water balance in            Water balance in
        a kangaroo rat              a human
        (2 mL/day)                  (2,500 mL/day)

                  Ingested                      Ingested
                  in food (0.2)                 in food (750)
                                    Ingested
                                    in liquid
Water                               (1,500)
gain
(mL)
        Derived from                          Derived from
        metabolism (1.8)                      metabolism (250)


                     Feces (0.09)                 Feces (100)

Water    Urine                      Urine
loss     (0.45)                     (1,500)
(mL)


           Evaporation (1.46)             Evaporation (900)
   Living things have evolved diverse ways of
    regulating their water balance.
   In vertebrates including frogs, lizards and
    humans, the kidneys are the main organs of
    excretion.
    How the Kidney functions when water levels are low:
        If blood concentration increases:

        1.    Nerve impulses sent from the hypothalamus stimulates
              the pituitary gland
        2.    Pituitary gland secretes ADH (Anti-diuretic hormone)
        3.    ADH causes the kidneys to reabsorb more water
        4.    More concentrated Urine is produced
Osmoregulation and the kidneys (Simple)
            Water content of                              Water content of
            the blood LOW                                 the blood HIGH

                                               Too much water drunk
                               Too much salt
                               or sweating



Brain
                                                                                Brain
produces                            Water content
                                                                                produces
More ADH                            of the blood normal
                                                                                Less ADH


High volume of water                                                     Low volume of water
reabsorbed by kidney                                                     reabsorbed by kidney

                                                              Urine output
               Urine output                                     HIGH
                 LOW
                                                            (large volume of
              (small volume of                              dilute urine)
              Concentrated urine)

Please Note: Urination still ends up with a net loss of water so it still needs to acquired.
Structural and Physiological                   Behavioural Adaptation
Adaptations
• Waterproof or impermeable layer can          • Burrowing underground for weeks at a time
reduce water loss (e.g.. Scales, hair,
feathers, exoskeleton).                        •Earthworms curl up in a ball of mucous

• Insects reabsorb water from the rectum,      •Some arthropods position their bodies to
excreting a dry faeces                         collect condensation at night.

•Birds and reptiles reabsorb water from        •The desert hopping mouse wraps its fluffy tail
their cloaca (the cavity into which their      around its mouth to trap water vapour.
rectum and ureter open). They excrete
uric acid instead of urine.                    •Nocturnal life styles in dessert biomes.

•Frogs swell up like a ball retains urine in
its bladder for the dry season
   Camels metabolise the fat in
    their hump, which gradually
    shrinks as the fat is used up.
   As the fat is used up water is
    produced
   1g of fat produces twice as much
    water than the equivalent mass
    of carbohydrates.
   However the camel can’t
    produce enough water this way.
   As water is lost, the body fluids
    become more concentrated but        Once water is available, camels rehydrate
    the camel’s tissues are extremely   by consuming large volumes of water, up
    tolerant of this condition.         to 40 L, in a matter of minutes.
   The Desert frog tucks itself in a
                                             water-conserving position under
                                             the ground.
                                            It then encases itself in a cocoon
                                             of layer upon layer of shed skin.
                                            The cocoon completely
                                             surrounds the frog except for its
                                             nostrils, and the little space
Cyclorana platycephalus, breaking from       between the body and the
its cocoon after rain.                       cocoon becomes humid.
                                            The frog’s metabolic rate slows
                                             as it enters aestivation, the
                                             summer equivalent of winter
                                             hibernation.
Water Balance in both fresh and saltwater fish
   Water balance is just as difficult in aquatic
    organisms
     Some marine invertebrates have water
      concentration in their cells the same as the
      surrounding water concentration (isotonic).
     These organisms are called osmoconformers.
     Jellyfish     Crabs           Sea Anemones
 Marine vertebrates like fish have body fluids that tend
  to be hypotonic to their surroundings.
 This means that their body fluids are of a lower
  concentration compared with the water in which they
  live.
 In saltwater fish:
     water is lost to the surface by the gills
     to replace water they take in large amounts of surrounding water BUT
      this is high in salts.

   Organisms that have specialised mechanisms for
    dealing with water balance are called
    osmoregulators.
   Freshwater animals tend to have
    concentration of ions in their tissues higher
    than the surrounding water, water molecules
    therefore tend to enter their cells.
   To Also deal with
     have high kidney filtration rate
     produce large amounts of dilute urine
     scales to reduce soft tissues to water
Thermoregulation and osmoregulation (bd)

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Thermoregulation and osmoregulation (bd)

  • 2. Endotherms  Ectotherms  Generate heat through  Absorb heat from the metabolic activity surroundings  Eg. humans, birds  Use behaviours to maintain a constant body temp  Eg fish, reptiles Both the gecko and the scorpion are at the same temperature as the air surrounding them. Notice the difference between these cold-blooded creatures and the warm-blooded humans holding them.
  • 3. Endotherms and Ectotherms can be further classified into two groups: Homeotherms Poikilotherms Animals that can maintain a Animals that cannot control their body relatively constant body temp temp. Body temp changes with the Eg. mammals, some insects, temp of the surroundings. Eg fish and birds reptiles Mammals can use up to 80% of the energy obtained from food simply to maintain In the image to the left, the lizard is just above room temperature, body temperature. being warmed by the human hand holding it. To warm up lizards will seek a sunny area and bask in warm sunlight, as in the image to the right.
  • 4. Any organism that is hotter than its surrounding may lose heat  Heat can be lost through:  Radiation  Conduction  Convection  Evaporation
  • 5.
  • 6.  Conduction – transfer of heat from a hotter to cooler object which is it in contact with  Convection – transfer of heat by warm air or water rising and being replaced by cool air or water  Evaporation – as water vaporises it takes heat with it form the body –cooling effect  Radiation – transfer of heat by means of infra-red waves
  • 7. An example of how the human body regulates body temperature.
  • 8. Adaptations allow an organism to survive in a range of environmental conditions that exist in their habitat.  Structural – body shape  Behavioural – what the animals does  Physiological – Internal metabolic functions  There are a number of adaptations animals have to be able to successfully regulate their temperature
  • 9. Increase Body Temperature Decrease Body Temperature Vasoconstriction: Arterioles get smaller to reduce Vasodilation: arterioles dilate (widen) so more blood going to skin, keeping the core warm. blood enters the skin capillaries and heat is lost. Shivering: Rapid contraction and relaxing of Sweating: Glands secrete sweat which removes skeletal muscles. Heat produced by respiration. heat when water evaporates. Piloerection: Hairs on skin stand up (trapping more Pilorelaxation: Hairs on skin flatten (trapping less air) and decreasing heat loss. air) and increasing heat loss. Curling up: reduces heat loss, decreases surface Stretching Out: By opening up, the body has a area. larger surface area. Huddling together: animals group together and Burrowing : To avoid heat of day share body heat., thus reducing heat loss. Hibernation: When an animal cannot cope with conditions animals undergoes dormancy Basking: take in heat from surroundings Fat: insulates against heat loss. Fur: Traps warm air to maintain heat Some arctic animals can also have antifreeze substances in their blood to prevent cell damage due to extreme cold!
  • 11. All animals have some mechanism to regulate water balance.  They balance water uptake vs. water loss and regulate solute concentration within cells and tissues  The fluid in cells, blood and tissue fluids contains a variety of solutes dissolved in water. This fluid is the medium in which everything happens – chemical reactions, transport of nutrients, gases and wastes.  Water is lost continually from the body in urine and faeces, through our sweat glands and tear ducts.  Osmoreceptors in the hypothalamus detect changes in the water concentration in the blood and body tissues
  • 12. Water Balance in Two Different Land Mammals Water balance in Water balance in a kangaroo rat a human (2 mL/day) (2,500 mL/day) Ingested Ingested in food (0.2) in food (750) Ingested in liquid Water (1,500) gain (mL) Derived from Derived from metabolism (1.8) metabolism (250) Feces (0.09) Feces (100) Water Urine Urine loss (0.45) (1,500) (mL) Evaporation (1.46) Evaporation (900)
  • 13. Living things have evolved diverse ways of regulating their water balance.  In vertebrates including frogs, lizards and humans, the kidneys are the main organs of excretion. How the Kidney functions when water levels are low: If blood concentration increases: 1. Nerve impulses sent from the hypothalamus stimulates the pituitary gland 2. Pituitary gland secretes ADH (Anti-diuretic hormone) 3. ADH causes the kidneys to reabsorb more water 4. More concentrated Urine is produced
  • 14. Osmoregulation and the kidneys (Simple) Water content of Water content of the blood LOW the blood HIGH Too much water drunk Too much salt or sweating Brain Brain produces Water content produces More ADH of the blood normal Less ADH High volume of water Low volume of water reabsorbed by kidney reabsorbed by kidney Urine output Urine output HIGH LOW (large volume of (small volume of dilute urine) Concentrated urine) Please Note: Urination still ends up with a net loss of water so it still needs to acquired.
  • 15. Structural and Physiological Behavioural Adaptation Adaptations • Waterproof or impermeable layer can • Burrowing underground for weeks at a time reduce water loss (e.g.. Scales, hair, feathers, exoskeleton). •Earthworms curl up in a ball of mucous • Insects reabsorb water from the rectum, •Some arthropods position their bodies to excreting a dry faeces collect condensation at night. •Birds and reptiles reabsorb water from •The desert hopping mouse wraps its fluffy tail their cloaca (the cavity into which their around its mouth to trap water vapour. rectum and ureter open). They excrete uric acid instead of urine. •Nocturnal life styles in dessert biomes. •Frogs swell up like a ball retains urine in its bladder for the dry season
  • 16. Camels metabolise the fat in their hump, which gradually shrinks as the fat is used up.  As the fat is used up water is produced  1g of fat produces twice as much water than the equivalent mass of carbohydrates.  However the camel can’t produce enough water this way.  As water is lost, the body fluids become more concentrated but Once water is available, camels rehydrate the camel’s tissues are extremely by consuming large volumes of water, up tolerant of this condition. to 40 L, in a matter of minutes.
  • 17. The Desert frog tucks itself in a water-conserving position under the ground.  It then encases itself in a cocoon of layer upon layer of shed skin.  The cocoon completely surrounds the frog except for its nostrils, and the little space Cyclorana platycephalus, breaking from between the body and the its cocoon after rain. cocoon becomes humid.  The frog’s metabolic rate slows as it enters aestivation, the summer equivalent of winter hibernation.
  • 18. Water Balance in both fresh and saltwater fish
  • 19. Water balance is just as difficult in aquatic organisms  Some marine invertebrates have water concentration in their cells the same as the surrounding water concentration (isotonic).  These organisms are called osmoconformers. Jellyfish Crabs Sea Anemones
  • 20.  Marine vertebrates like fish have body fluids that tend to be hypotonic to their surroundings.  This means that their body fluids are of a lower concentration compared with the water in which they live.  In saltwater fish:  water is lost to the surface by the gills  to replace water they take in large amounts of surrounding water BUT this is high in salts.  Organisms that have specialised mechanisms for dealing with water balance are called osmoregulators.
  • 21.
  • 22. Freshwater animals tend to have concentration of ions in their tissues higher than the surrounding water, water molecules therefore tend to enter their cells.  To Also deal with  have high kidney filtration rate  produce large amounts of dilute urine  scales to reduce soft tissues to water