Why do structures evolve the way they do?
Adaptation through natural selection allows organisms to evolve certain structures as a result of functional outcomes.
Difference between anatomy and physiology?
Anatomy: features evolved to allow for survival
Physiology: biological processes taking place through the anatomy
What does a large membrane surface area allow for? Give 3 examples of this.
Greater rate of exchange of nutrients, waste products, gases. (e.g. Villi in small intestine allow for maximal absorption of nutrients, porous lung tissue allows for maximal absorption of oxygen, Kidney tubules allows for maximal reabsorption of nutrients.
What does evolutionary convergence reflect?
Adaptations to a similar environmental challenge coupled with the constraints of physical laws resulting in similar structures (size and shape).
How does exchange of metabolites occur?
Substances dissolved in aqueous medium diffuse and are transported across the plasma membrane of cells.
What is an element of multicellular organization that is required for it to function?
Equal access to suitable aqueous environment to allow for equal distribution of nutrients.
What is interstitial fluid?
fluid outside of the body’s cells and outside of the blood vessels that allows for movement of material into and out of cells.
What is a pro and on of complexity in a multicellular organism?
Pro: allows for maintenance of relatively stable internal environment in a variable external environment
Con: Energy expensive and relies on coordination.
What is the hierarchal organization of cells and what does each do?
What are the four main categories of tissues and their functions?
What are the 7 types of epithelial tissue?
Simple cuboidal, simple squamous, simple columnar, stratified cuboidal, stratified squamous, stratified cuboidal, pseudo-stratified columnar, transitional.
What is located in the connective tissue’s extracellular matrix? What state is the substance of the matrix?
fibroblasts: secrete fibre proteins
macrophages: engulf foreign particles and cell debris
Matrix consists of liquid, jellylike or solid fibers.
What are 6 types of connective tissue and their functions?
What are the two types of muscle fibres?
Skeletal muscle: aka striated muscle, attached to bones and responsible for voluntary movement
Smooth muscle: many lines internal organs and is responsible for involuntary body activities
What is the nervous tissue composed of?
Neurons: nerve cells that transmit nerve impulses
Glial cells/glia: help nourish, insulate and replenish neurons
Control and coordination within a body depend on which systems? What’s the difference?
endocrine system: transmits hormones to receptive cells throughout the body via blood.
nervous system: transmits information between specific locations
What is a hormone?
Regulatory substances made by one tissue to stimulate action in another tissue. Can be either fast or slow acting, but can have long-lasting effects.
What does nervous signalling and endocrine signalling depend on?
Nervous signalling: pathway of signal
Endocrine signalling: type of signal
What are two ways animals manage their internal environment and how do they differ?
Regulator: uses energy to fuel internal control mechanisms to moderate internal change in the face of external environmental fluctuation
Conformer: allows internal condition to vary with external environment.
Homeostasis
a self-regulating process by which a living organism can maintain internal stability while adjusting to changing external conditions
How does a negative feedback loop work?
How does a positive feedback loop work?
What is the difference between acclimation and acclimatization?
Acclimation: adjusting to a single environmental factor
Aclimatization: adjusting to complex changes in external environment
What is thermoregulation?
Process by which animals maintain and internal temperature within a tolerable range.