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Title: Interdependence%20


1
Interdependence Interaction
  • In Living Systems

2
Systems
  • Any group of parts that work together
  • as a unit.

3
Organization of the Human Body
  • Cells 1st level of organization the basic unit
    of structure and function
  • Tissues a group of cells that perform that same
    function
  • Types Muscle, Connective, Nerve, Epithelial
  • Organs a group of tissues that perform a
    specific function
  • Organ systems a group of organs that work
    together to perform a specific function

4
Interactions within the human body
  • 11 Systems of the Human Body

Nervous Cardiovascular Digestive Respiratory Mu
scular Skeletal Endocrine Excretory Immune
Integumentary Reproductive
5
Nervous
  • obtains and processes information from the bodys
    internal and external environment
  • directs most body functions
  • main components brain, spinal cord, nerves

Dendrite
Axon
Cell Body
6
Cardiovascular
  • Circulatory
  • transports needed materials to body cells
  • removes wastes
  • main components heart, arteries, veins

7
Digestive
  • breaks down food and absorbs the broken-down
    materials
  • main components
  • liver
  • Stomach
  • gall bladder
  • small intestine

8
Respiratory
  • gets oxygen into the body
  • removes carbon dioxide
  • main components trachea or windpipe, lungs,
    diaphragm

9
Muscular Skeletal
  • Muscular enables the body to move
  • Smooth involuntary (digestive tract)
  • Striated voluntary (movement)
  • Cardio involuntary (heart)
  • Skeletal supports and protects the body
  • Work together to enable movement

10
Endocrine
  • produces chemicals called hormones that help
    control many body processes
  • main components glands and stomach, pancreas
    (insulin), and kidneys that produce hormones

11
Excretory
  • removes wastes
  • helps regulate water in the body
  • main components kidney and large intestine

12
Immune
  • fights disease
  • main components liver, lymph nodes, blood,
    thymus
  • Lymphocytes- white blood cells

13
Integumentary
  • Skin protects the body
  • keeps water inside
  • helps sense the external environment

14
Reproductive
  • creates offspring
  • determines male and female characteristics
  • main components ovaries, testes

15
Review
  • What is the largest organ in the human body?
  • Skin
  • What type of muscle is the heart made out of?
  • Cardiac
  • Where does the process of digestion begin?
  • In the mouth (saliva and chewing)
  • What is the dome shaped muscle that helps to move
    air called?
  • Diaphragm

16
Interactions Interdependence
  • Interactions organ systems work together to do a
    specific job
  • Interdependence organ systems depend on each
    other and cannot work alone

17
Interactions Transporting Oxygen
  • Respiratory delivery of oxygen and removal of
    carbon dioxide
  • Trachea tube connecting to the lungs
  • Alveoli round sacs in the lung
  • Moves oxygen from air to blood
  • Moves carbon dioxide from blood to air

http//www.shands.org/health/graphics/images/en/98
28.jpg
  • Cardiovascular carries oxygen from lungs to
    blood stream
  • Muscular enables air to enter lungs
  • Diaphragm dome shape muscle

18
Transporting Oxygen
RESPIRATION
BREATHING
physical
chemical
19
Interactions in digesting food
  • Digestive breaks down food into simpler
    substances to be used by body cells
  • Mouth and stomach begins to break down food
  • Small intestine completes the breakdown of food
    and absorbs the nutrients (absorbs through villi)
  • Large intestine undigested food passes out of
    the body as waste

20
Interactions in digesting food
  • Muscular
  • move jaws
  • to breakdown food
  • Peristalsis- involuntary movement of smooth
    muscles in the digestive tract
  • Enables you to swallow food
  • Within the stomach food is churned and
    squeezed, broken down into smaller particles

21
Interactions in digesting food
  • Cardiovascular carries nutrients absorbed
    through the small intestine to the blood
  • Nutrients are carried throughout the body.

http//www.glogster.com/media/2/4/8/51/4085115.jpg
small intestine magnified
22
Movements Muscles, Bones, Nerves
  • Muscular produce movement by contracting or
    shortening (voluntary striated muscles)
  • Skeletal muscles attached to bones move your
    body
  • Nervous involved in movement. Brain and nerves
    direct muscles to contract.
  • Cardiovascular circulates oxygen and food to
    cells
  • Respiratory brings oxygen into body, removes
    carbon dioxide
  • Digestive processes food for delivery to cells

23
Review
  • Which organ systems interact to transport oxygen?
    (3)
  • Respiratory, cardiovascular, muscular
  • Which organ systems work together to get
    nutrients to cells? (3)
  • Digestive, muscular, cardiovascular
  • Which systems allow us to move? (6)
  • Muscular, skeletal, nervous, cardiovascular,
    respiratory, digestive

24
Equilibrium and Feedback
  • Stability of Living Systems
  • Equilibrium balance stable all parts function
    smoothly
  • Homeostasis process by which the bodys
    internal environment is kept stable in spite of
    changes in the external environment (body
    balance)
  • Negative Feedback
  • One way in which living systems maintain internal
    equilibrium or homeostasis

25
Keeping Body Temperature Constant
  • Stay cool sweating. When you become warm, you
    perspire. Heat comes from the body out through
    your sweat
  • Shivering muscles in your body contract. This
    requires energy which generates heat to make the
    body warm.

26
Maintaining Glucose Levels in the Blood
  • Energy comes from the breakdown of the sugar
    glucose. Glucose comes from the food you eat.
    After glucose is absorbed by the digestive
    system, blood transports the glucose and delivers
    it to cells.
  • Chemical reactions regulates the level of
    glucose in the blood
  • Hormone a chemical produced by an endocrine
    gland that affects the activity of a tissue or
    organ
  • Insulin a hormone that helps regulate glucose
    levels
  • Produced in the pancreas

27
Maintaining Water Equilibrium in Plants Cells
  • Diffusion a process where substances move back
    and forth through the cell membrane
  • Cell membrane a thin, flexible structure
  • Movement of water in cells
  • Osmosis the diffusion of water molecules
    through a selectively permeable membrane.
  • (Selectively permeable allows some things
    through, but not all. An example is a cell
    membrane.)
  • The concentration of water molecules in and out
    of the cell helps determine whether water enters
    or leaves a cell.

28
Turgor Pressure
  • Turgor pressure the pressure of water against
    the cell wall of a plant cell
  • Gives shape and firmness to plant stems and
    leaves
  • Maintains water balance
  • Negative feedback in turgor pressure
  • Turgor pressure helps keep excess water from
    entering the plant.
  • An increase in turgor pressure decreases the
    movement of water molecules into the cell.
  • An increase in water molecules entering the cell
    eventually causes fewer water molecules to move
    into the cell.

29
Water Equilibrium in Animals
  • Thirsty animal drinks
  • Kidneys
  • remove wastes
  • adjust amount of water in your blood by changing
    the concentration of water in the urine they
    produce

30
Review
  • What does equilibrium mean?
  • Balance
  • Where is insulin produced?
  • Pancreas
  • What does insulin regulate
  • Glucose levels (blood sugar)
  • What type of pressure gives shape and firmness to
    plants?
  • turgor

31
Created by C. Milton, CMS Science
  • Credits
  • Text CSCOPE
  • Images
  • Microsoft Clipart
  • DK Clipart
  • Other images where cited
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