Title: OBJECTIVES Circulation in Animals
1OBJECTIVESÂ Â Â -Circulation in Animals
- Describe the need for circulatory and respiratory
systems due to increasing animal body size - Distinguish between open and closed circulatory
systems. List the three basic components common
to both systems. - List the structural components of a vertebrate
circulatory system and relate their structure to
their functions - Describe the general relationship between
metabolic rates and the structure of the
vertebrate circulatory system - Using diagrams, compare and contrast the
circulatory systems of fish, amphibians, non-bird
reptiles, and mammals or birds - Distinguish between pulmonary and systemic
circuits and explain the functions of each - Explain the advantage of double circulation over
a single circuit
2- Define a cardiac cycle, distinguish between
systole and diastole, and explain what causes the
first and second heart sounds. - Define cardiac output and describe two factors
that influence it. - List the four heart valves, describe their
location, and explain their functions. - Define heart murmur and explain its cause.
- Define sinoatrial (SA) node and describe its
location in the heart - Distinguish between a myogenic heart and a
neurogenic heart - Describe the origin and pathway of the action
potential (cardiac impulse) in the normal human
heart. - Explain how the pace of the SA node can be
modulated by nerves, hormones, body temperature,
and exercise. - Define blood pressure and describe how it is
measured. - Explain how peripheral resistance and cardiac
output affect blood pressure
3- Relate the structures of capillaries, arteries,
and veins to their functions. - Explain why blood flow through capillaries is
substantially slower than it is through arteries
and veins. - Explain how blood returns to the heart even
though it must sometimes travel from the lower
extremities against gravity. - Explain how blood flow through capillary beds is
regulated. - Explain how osmotic pressure and hydrostatic
pressure regulate the exchange of fluid and
solutes across capillaries. - Describe the composition of lymph and explain how
the lymphatic system helps the normal functioning
of the circulatory system. Explain the role of
lymph nodes in body defense. - Describe the composition and functions of plasma.
- Relate the structure of erythrocytes to their
function. - List the five main types of white blood cells and
characterize their functions. - Describe the structure of platelets.
- Outline the formation of erythrocytes from their
origin from stem cells in the red marrow of bones
to their destruction by phagocytic cells. - Describe the hormonal control of erythrocyte
production. - Outline the sequence of events that occurs during
blood clotting and explain what prevents
spontaneous clotting in the absence of injury. - Distinguish between a heart attack and a stroke.
- Distinguish between low-density lipoproteins
(LDLs) and high-density lipoproteins (HDLs). - List the factors that have been correlated with
an increased risk of cardiovascular disease.  Â
4Gas Exchange in Animals
- Define gas exchange and distinguish between a
respiratory medium and a respiratory surface - Describe the general requirements for a
respiratory surface and list a variety of
respiratory organs that meet these requirements. - Describe respiratory adaptations of aquatic
animals. - Describe the advantages and disadvantages of
water as a respiratory medium. - Describe countercurrent exchange and explain why
it is more efficient than the concurrent flow of
water and blood. - Describe the advantages and disadvantages of air
as a respiratory medium and explain how insect
tracheal systems are adapted for efficient gas
exchange in a terrestrial environment. - For the human respiratory system, describe the
movement of air through air passageways to the
alveolus, listing the structures that air must
pass through on its journey. - Compare positive and negative pressure breathing.
Explain how respiratory movements in humans
ventilate the lungs. - Distinguish between tidal volume, vital capacity,
and residual volume. - Explain how the respiratory systems of birds and
mammals differ. - Explain how breathing is controlled in humans.
- Define partial pressure and explain how it
influences diffusion across respiratory surfaces. - Describe the adaptive advantage of respiratory
pigments in circulatory systems. Distinguish
between hemocyanin and hemoglobin as respiratory
pigments. - Draw the Hb-oxygen dissociation curve, explain
the significance of its shape, and explain how
the affinity of hemoglobin for oxygen changes
with oxygen concentration. - Describe how carbon dioxide is picked up at the
tissues and deposited in the lungs. - Describe the respiratory adaptations of the
pronghorn that give it great speed and endurance. - Describe respiratory adaptations of diving
mammals and the role of myoglobin.
5CHAPTER 42CIRCULATION AND GAS EXCHANGE
6TRANSPORT SYSTEMS
- Circulatory Systems Reduce Distances Substances
Must Diffuse diffusion too slow for most animals
7Circulatory Systems Connect Aqueous Environment
of Cell with Organs Specialized for Exchange
- Oxygen diffuses from air in lungs across
epithelium, into blood - Oxygenated blood transported to all body parts
- Oxygen diffuses from blood and through plasma
membrane - Carbon dioxide moves in opposite direction
8Circulatory Systems Maintain Homeostasis
- Blood passes through liver and kidneys which
regulate nutrient and waste content
9INVERTEBRATES
- Gastrovascular Cavities
- Cnidarians do not require specialized internal
transport body wall 2 cells thick - Water inside gastrovascular cavity is continuous
with surrounding water - Cavity functions both in digestion and
distribution of nutrients - Nutrients have a short distance to diffuse to
outer cell layer
10Open and Closed Circulatory Systems
- Open circulatory system (arthropods, mollusks)
hemolymph bathes internal organs in sinuses (Fig
38.2a 4th ed) - Hemolymph blood and interstitial fluid
- Circulation contractions of heart and body
movements - Relaxation blood enters through ostia
- Chemical exchange btw. hemolymph and cells in
sinuses
11Closed circulatory system (annelids, squids,
octopuses, vertebrates) blood confined to
vessels and distinct interstitial fluid present
- Heart pumps blood into large vessels
- Major vessels branch into smaller vessels which
supply organs (Fig 38.2b) - Blood exchanges materials with interstitial fluid
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13VERTEBRATES
- Cardiovascular System heart, blood vessels,
blood - Heart ? arteries ? arterioles ? capillaries ?
venules ? veins ? heart
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15Fish 2 chambered heart, 1 atrium, 1 ventricle
- Ventricle ? gill capillaries (gas exchange) ?
arteries ? organ capillary beds ? veins ? atrium
? atrium ? ventricle - Blood flow through two capillary beds drops blood
pressure - Blood flow aided by swimming
16Amphibians 3 chambered heart, 2 atria, 1
ventricle
- Double Circulation pulmonary, systemic
- Ventricle ? lungs/skin (gas exchange) ? left
atrium ? ventricle ? all other organs ? right
atrium - Increased blood pressure for system circulation
- Some mixing of oxygenated and deoxygenated blood
ridge in ventricle diverts mostly oxygenated
blood to systemic circulation
17Reptiles (excluding crocodilians) 3 chambered
hearts with partially divided ventricle
- Reduces mixing of oxygenated and deoxygenated
blood
18Birds, Mammals, Crocodilians 4 chambered heart
with 2 atria and 2 ventricles
- Prevents mixing of blood
- Increased oxygen delivery efficiency
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20THE RHYTHMIC PUMP
- The Heart Form and Function
21Human Heart
- Located beneath sternum
- Cone-shaped, fist sized
- Surrounded by sac with a 2-layered wall
- Mostly muscle tissue
- Atria thin-walled collection chambers
- Ventricles thick-walled, powerful pumps
22Heart chambers alternatively contract and relax
in rhythmic cycle
- Cardiac cycle
- Systole contraction, pump
- Diastole relaxation, fill
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24Valves prevent backflow
- Connective tissue
- Atrioventricular atrium/ventricle
- Semilunar valves ventricles/arteries
- Heart murmur
25Heart Rate number of beats per minute
- Pulse
- Average resting rate 60 beats/minute
- Inverse relationship between animal body size and
pulse
26Cardiac output volume per minute
- Stroke volume volume per pump
27Control of Heart Myogenic (self-excitable)
tempo controlled by sinoatrial (SA) node
- Right atrium
- Specialized muscle with characteristics of muscle
and nerve tissue - Atria contract in unison
- Excitation causes atrioventricular (AV) node to
contract - Electrocardiogram (EKG) detects electrical
currents - Rate influenced by antagonistic nerves, hormones,
temperature, exercise
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29Blood Vessel Structure
- Arteries/veins have 3 layers outer elastic
connective, middle smooth muscle, inner
epithelium (simple squamous epithelium) - Middle/outer layers thicker in arteries than in
veins - Capillaries only endothelium
30More blood flows through large vessels than in
small vessels due to total smaller diameter in
large vessels
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32Blood Pressure Hydrostatic force blood exerts
against vessel wall
- Pressure greatest in arteries during systole
- Peripheral resistance (arterioles)
- Determined by cardiac output and peripheral
resistance - Stress constricts
- Veins pressure near zero skeletal muscles,
breathing, valves
33Blood Pressure and Flow through the arteries,
capillaries, to veins
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35Blood Flow Through Capillary Beds
- 5-10 of capillaries carry oxygen at one time
- Full load in brain, heart, kidneys, liver
- Distribution controlled by nerves hormones
- Arteriole contraction/relaxation
- Precapillary sphincters
- Diversion
- To digestive tract after meal
- To skeletal muscle - exercise
36Capillary Exchange
- Exchange between blood and interstitial fluid
- Diffusion, endo/exocytosis, bulk flow
- Fluid leaves near arteriole and 85 reenters near
venule - 15 returned through lymphatic system
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38Lymphatic System
- Lymph similar to interstitial fluid
- Lymph diffuses into lymph capillaries
- Valves and contractions
- Lymph nodes swellings along system that filter
lymph and attack viruses and bacteria - Lymph capillaries absorb fats from villi
39BLOOD CONNECTIVE TISSUE CELLS AND PLASMA
- Plasma 45 of Blood, 90 water
- Electrolytes dissolved ions osmotic balance,
buffer - Proteins escort lipids, immunoglobulins,
clotting factors - Serum clotting factors removed
- Contains nutrients, metabolic wastes, respiratory
gases, hormones
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41Cellular Elements
- Erythrocytes Red Blood Cells biconcave discs
- Most numerous of cells
- Lack nuclei, anaerobic respiration
- Contains hemoglobin, reversible bind oxygen to
iron - Erythropoietin from kidneys
42- Leukocytes White Blood Cells defense and
immunity - Basophils, eosinophils, neutrophils, lymphocytes,
monocytes - Interstitial fluid, lymph nodes
- Platelets cellular fragments, blood clotting
43Cell types in a blood smear
Platelets
Eosinophils
Neutrophils
Monocytes
Lymphocytes
Basophils
44- Multipotent stem cells give rise to all blood
cells in bone marrow (ribs, vertebrae,
breastbone, pelvis)
45- Blood Clotting Platelets clump, release
clotting factors, fibrinogen ? fibrin
46CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASES
- Leading Cause of Death in the United States
- Heart Attack death of cardiac muscle resulting
from blockage of coronary arteries - Stroke death of nervous tissue in brain
resulting from blockage of arteries in brain - Thrombus blood clot that blocks a vessel
- Embolus moving clot
47CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASES Cont.
- Atherosclerosis plaques develop on inner walls
of arteries and narrow vessels. Decrease blood
flow, increase risk of clot formation - Arteriosclerosis calcium deposits
- Angina pectoris chest pains, insufficient
oxygen - Hypertension high blood pressure, promotes
atherosclerosis - Smoking, diet, LDLs (Low Density Lipoprotein),
HDL (High Density Lipoprotein)
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49GAS EXCHANGE
- Movement of oxygen and carbon dioxide between
animal and the environment - Respiratory Medium Source of oxygen air or
water
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52Respiratory Surface Where exchange occurs
- Moist gases dissolved in water
- Large
- Protozoa Entire surface area
- Sponges, cnidarians, flatworms each body cell
in contact with outside environment - Earthworms, some amphibians use moist skin
- Specialized organs
53GILLS
- Vary in shape and location among organisms
- Ventilation Any method of increasing flow of
respiratory medium over respiratory surface - Water has low oxygen content much energy spent
on ventilation - Countercurrent exchange blood flows opposite to
direction in which water passes maintains
concentration gradient
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56TRACHEAE INSECTS
- Advantages of air over water
- High oxygen content
- Gases diffuse faster in air
- Ventilation less important
- Air desiccation problem solved through internal
respiratory surfaces
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58Trachea tiny air tubes in insect body
- Spiracles
- Contact with almost all cells
- Diffusion or ventilation
- Circulatory systems dont transport gases
59LUNGS
- Form and Function of Mammalian Respiratory
Systems - Thoracic cavity 2-layered sac
- Nostrils warm, moisten, filter
- Pharynx, glottis, larynx, trachea, bronchi,
bronchioles, alveoli - Oxygen dissolves in moist film covering
epithelium and diffuses to capillaries carbon
dioxide moves in opposite direction
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61Ventilation Breathing
- Frogs positive pressure breathing
- Mammals negative pressure breathing
- Diaphragm, ribs
- Contract, expand
- Relax, compress
- Tidal volume normal breath volume
- Vital capacity maximum air volume
- Residual volume amount that remains in lungs
- Birds air sacs in abdomen, neck
- Air sacs do not exchange gases bellows
- Parabronchi tiny channels one direction
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64- Control of Breathing
- Medulla oblongata, pons negative feedback,
sense carbon dioxide levels
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66- Loading/Unloading Oxygen
- Gases diffuse from higher partial pressure to
lower partial pressure
67Respiratory Pigments and Oxygen Transport
- Hemocyanin (arthropods, mollusks) blue due to
copper, not confined to cells - Hemoglobin vertebrates
- 4 subunits heme group, Fe
- Cooperativity (Fig 38.26)
- Bohr shift (Fig 38.26b)
68Carbon Dioxide Transport
- Transported in three forms
- Dissolved carbon dioxide in plasma (7)
- Bound to amino groups of hemoglobin (23)
- As bicarbonate ions in blood (70)
- Formation of bicarbonate produces H ions and
attach to hemoglobin and results in only slight
pH change
69Adaptations of Diving Mammals
- Store large amounts of oxygen in blood
- Higher myoglobin concentration in muscles
- Higher blood volume