Title: Heterotrophs
1Heterotrophs
- Food for heterotrophs
- Changes in food through time
- What animals need for digestion
- Mechanical breakdown of food
2Heterotrophs
- All animals
- All fungi
- Some bacteria
3Heterotrophs
- Heterotrophs obtain energy for living and
material for building and repairing their
structure from organic matter in their
surroundings - Heterotrophs are therefore consumers
- Organic matter used by heterotroph is its food
4- Each heterotroph has structural and physiological
features, and displays behaviours, that assist it
in obtaining food - Feeding techniques may be active or passive
-
5Example of passive feeding techniques
- Whale sharks- swimming with large mouth open,
consuming krill and large quantities of water
which is then filtered.
6Example of active feeding technique
7Heterotrophs as consumers
- Heterotrophs are either directly or indirectly
dependent on organic compounds produced by
autotrophs - Unlike autotrophs, they cannot survive on
inorganic matter - For organic material to become food for a
heterotroph, it must be able to be broken down
and used by the heterotroph to supply it with the
chemical energy for living and repairing its own
structure
8Directly dependent
- Cow (heterotroph) eats grass (autotroph)
- Fungi (heterotroph) consume organic material such
as carbon found in logs (autotroph)
9Indirectly dependent
- Cow (heterotroph) eats grass (autotroph)
- Other animals (heterotrophs) eat cow (heterotroph)
OR
10Food changes through time
- The production and use of food is basic to human
survival and an integral part of our culture. - Major events impacting the food we eat
- Discovery of fire
- Growing our own crops
- Domesticating animals
- Exploration and trade with other cultures
11Exchanges between cultures
Boiling water Killed organisms
- Tea and coffee (1800s)
- Sugar
- White flour
- Changes in Australian diet from aboriginal to
European to multicultural
Tooth decay
12What animals need for digestion
- Digestion first step after food is eaten
enabling heterotrophs to access the nutrients and
energy in it - Some nutrients in food (minerals, vitamins) will
dissolve and readily enter cells. - Other nutrients (fats, proteins) are too large to
pass through cell membranes. - These larger nutrients must be broken down into
smaller units to allow absorption. - Digestion is the chemical process of breaking
down large organic molecules to a size that can
be absorbed.
13Four steps before a substance becomes available
to cells of an animal
- Ingestion of food
- Mechanical breakdown of the ingested food
- Secretion of various digestive enzymes onto the
food - Absorption of digested food
141. Ingestion of food
- Occurs when a food source in the environment is
captured and taken into an animals mouth - EATING!
152. Mechanical breakdown of the ingested food
- Large pieces of food being broken down into
smaller pieces - This is to do with surface area to volume ratio
SAV - SAV ratio identifies how many units of external
surface area are available to supply each unit
of internal volume. - As a shape decreases in size, SAV ratio
increases - As food is broken down into smaller and smaller
pieces, although total volume of food stays the
same, total area of food exposed to enzymes
increases (faster digestion)
163. Secretion of various digestive enzymes onto
the food
- Digestive enzymes catalyse (speeds up) the
breakdown of organic molecules into smaller units
that can cross cell membranes - This breakdown of complex organic molecules is
digestion - After this has occurred, the energy and matter
contained in the organic molecules become
available for use by the animal
174. Absorption of digested food
- The organic molecules (now small enough) pass
through membranes of cells lining the digestive
tract and then pass into body fluids - Different animals eat different kinds of food
- The way in which an animal digests food depends
on which kinds of food it eats
18Mechanical breakdown of food
- As mentioned, food is broken down to provide the
largest possible surface area for enzyme action - After it is broken down, food is mixed with
digestive enzymes - In animals (like us), jaws and teeth play an
important role in this process
19Jaws and teeth
- The jaws surround the mouth and are opened and
closed by muscles - Teeth are hard bony appendages found on the jaws
on many animals - Movement of toothed jaws breaks food into pieces
- YOU ALL KNOW THIS! YOU DO IT ALL THE TIME!
- Most living vertebrates also do this
20Different kinds of teeth
- Four different types found in most mammals
- 1. Incisors- sharp endges, cut food, get food
into mouth - 2. Canines are pointed, pierce and tear food
- 3. Premolars have rigid surgaces to grind the
food so it is easy to swallow - 4. Molars same as premolars
- These are in order from the front of the jaw to
the back
21Parts of the tooth
22Differences between animals
- Most mammals have different kinds of teeth
- Some mammals (dolphins) have teeth that all have
the same structure designed for eating fish (they
do not chew) - Carnivorous mammals- eat meat, use teeth an jaws
to chew their food - Herbivores- eat fruit, leaves, grass. They do not
have canine teeth - Omnivores- eat both plant and animal material and
so have characteristics of both types - Diagram showing the difference, text book P.106
23Crackers!
24Next lesson
- What happens after the food is broken down and
ready for digestion?