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Circulation and Gas Exchange

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Circulatory system solves this problem. Circulatory Systems ... Body plan does not call for a circulatory system. They are only 2 cells thick ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Circulation and Gas Exchange


1
Chapter 42
  • Circulation and Gas Exchange

2
Overview
  • Every organism must exchange materials and energy
    with its environment
  • Example oxygen in carbon dioxide out

3
Circulation in Animals
  • Diffusion is not adequate for transportation in
    animals
  • Glucose takes 3 hours to diffuse 1 cm
  • Circulatory system solves this problem

4
Circulatory Systems
  • Gastrovascular cavities are present in most
    invertebrates
  • Body plan does not call for a circulatory system
  • They are only 2 cells thick
  • Open and closed circulatory systems
  • Animals with many cell layers rely on some system
    to bath all the cells with nutrients
  • Three parts
  • Fluid blood
  • Set of tubes vessels
  • Pump - heart

5
Cardiovascular System Adaptations
6
Mammalian Double Circulation
7
Mammalian Heart
  • Size of a clenched fist
  • Consists of four chamber
  • Two atria
  • Thin walled collects blood returning to the heart
  • Two ventricles
  • Thick walled which pumps blood to either lungs or
    the body
  • Contracts and relaxes in rhythmic fashion
  • As it contracts it pumps blood, and as it relaxes
    it fills with blood
  • Called a cardiac cycle
  • Contraction phase is systole
  • Relaxation phase is diastole
  • Volume of blood per minute that the left
    ventricle pumps is called cardiac output

8
Mammalian Heart
  • Contains four valves
  • Preventing the backflow of blood in the heart
  • Between each atrium and ventricle is an
    atrioventricular valve (AV)
  • Semilunar valves are located at each exit
  • Aorta and pulmonary arteries
  • Closing of these valves creates the heartbeat
    sound heard with a stethoscope
  • Heart murmur a hissing sound caused by a
    malfunctioning valve

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11
Maintaining Heart Beat
  • Heart must beat on its own in other words you
    dont have conscious control over the hearts
    rhythm
  • Certain vertebrate cardiac muscle cells are self
    excitable (they contract without any signal from
    the nervous system)
  • Region of heart called the sinoatrial (SA) node
    or pacemaker sets the rate and timing at which
    all cardiac muscle cells contract
  • Located in the wall of the right atrium
  • SA node generates electrical impulses
  • Making the atria contract in unison
  • Impulses also pass to a relay point called the
    atrioventricular (AV) node
  • Located in the wall between the right atrium and
    right ventricle
  • Here the impulses are delayed about 0.1 sec
    before spreading to the walls of the ventricles

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13
Vessels
14
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15
Blood Components
16
Blood Clotting
17
Respiration
  • Breathing plus cellular respiration
  • need a constant supply of energy to maintain
    yourself
  • remember metabolism needs oxygen

18
Gas Exchange
  • All organisms rely on diffusion of gases
  • respiratory surface must be moist
  • cells lining the surface are thin
  • surface must be large to allow adequate gas
    exchange
  • Examples
  • nematode
  • jellyfish

19
Respiratory Systems
20
Gills
  • many aquatic organisms posses gills
  • normally branched or folded to increase surface
    area
  • fish gills are covered by the operculum
  • pump water in mouth and over the gills

21
Terrestrial animals
  • Air has a higher O2 concentration than water
  • air presents some challenges for gas exchange
  • resp. surfaces must remain moist
  • cant be on the outside of the body like gills are

22
Tracheae
  • Internal branching tubes
  • large tubes branch into tracheoles which nourish
    the cells
  • air enters trachea through spiracles

23
Lungs
  • Chambers containing moist delicate surfaces
  • First lung appeared in freshwater fish as an
    outpocket of digestive system
  • Birds have extremely efficient lungs

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25
Human Respiratory System
  • Two parts
  • Conducting portion
  • carries gases to the gas exchange portion
  • Gas exchange portion
  • the lungs

26
Conducting Portion
  • Brings air into the lungs
  • Air enters the nose or mouth
  • passes into the pharynx
  • and then the larynx
  • opening to the larynx is guarded by the
    epiglottis
  • air then passes into the trachea
  • trachea splits into two tubes called bronchi
  • into bronchioles
  • to the alveoli

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28
Gas Exchange Portion
  • Lungs
  • moist surface
  • packed with tiny alveoli (2-3 million)
  • increases surface area to volume ratio
  • Alveoli
  • thin walls
  • look like tiny bubbles
  • completely covered with capillaries

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31
Gas Transportation
  • Oxygen and Carbon Dioxide are carried different
    ways
  • Oxygen binds to hemoglobin
  • loosely and reversible
  • oxygenated blood is bright red
  • deoxygenated blood is dark maroon and appears blue

32
Gas Transportation
  • Carbon Dioxide is carried in three ways
  • in the presence of carbonic anhydrase it forms
    HCO3 and diffuses into the plasma
  • about 70 of CO2 is carried this way
  • some binds to the hemoglobin
  • 20 of it is carried this way
  • some stays as CO2 in the plasma
  • 10 of it is carried this way

33
1) O2 diffuses through the lungs
3) O2 diffuses though capillary wall to tissues
2) O2 is carried to tissues bound to hemoglobin
34
Inhalation and Exhalation
  • Inhalation depends on airtight chest cavity
  • Lungs are bordered by neck muscles on top and
    diaphragm on the bottom
  • Rib cage surrounds the lungs and is covered by
    the pleural membranes which make an airtight seal
    between the lungs and chest wall

35
Inhalation
  • Accomplished by expanding the chest cavity
  • diaphragm contracts drawing it downwards
  • ribs also contract bringing them up and out
  • The lungs expand with these motions due to the
    airtight chest cavity

36
Exhalation
  • Occurs automatically as muscles are relaxed
  • More air can be exhaled as abdominal muscles are
    contracted

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38
Respiratory Control Center
  • Breathing occurs automatically due to nerve
    signals from the brain
  • Respiratory Center is located in the medulla of
    the brain
  • Respiration rate depends on CO2 levels in the
    blood
  • monitored by the medulla
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