UNIT 4 ANIMALS

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UNIT 4 ANIMALS STRUCTURE & FUNCTION

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UNIT 4 ANIMALS. STRUCTURE & FUNCTION. Agenda: Assignment due Lesson HW. Brief review questions on Respiration Q1) What are the stages of respiration? Q2) What happens during gas exchange ? Q3) What do you use stop yourself from swallowing Listerine?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of UNIT 4 ANIMALS

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UNIT 4 ANIMALSS T R U C T U R E & F U N C T I O N

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Agenda:

• Assignment due• Lesson• HW

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Quick Questions on Ch. 11

• Brief review questions on Respiration

Q1) What are the stages of respiration?

Q2) What happens during gas exchange?

Q3) What do you use stop yourself from swallowing Listerine?

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12. 1 The Function of Circulation

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12. 1 The Function of Circulation

• The individual cells that make up the structural units that require - the obtaining of nutrients and oxygen - the elimination of wastes

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12. 1 The Function of Circulation

The circulatory system is ????

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12. 1 The Function of Circulation

The circulatory system:

• The system that transports blood, nutrients, and waste around the body

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12.1 - Main Functions of Circulatory System

Main Functions of Circulatory System1 Transport gases (from the __________system), nutrients, and

waste materials (from ____________system)

2

3

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12.1 - Main Functions of CS (Circ. System)

Main Functions of Circulatory System1 Transport gases (from the __________system), nutrients, and

waste materials (from ____________system)

2 Regulate internal temperature and transports chemical substances that are vital to health from one part of the body to the other

3

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12.1 - Main Functions of CS

Main Functions of Circulatory System

1 Transport gases (from the __________system), nutrients, and waste materials (from ____________system)

2 Regulate internal temperature and transports chemical substances that are vital to health from one part of the body to the other

3 Protects against blood loss from injury and against disease – causing microbes or toxic substances introduced into the body

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12.1 - Major Components of the Circulatory System

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12.1 - Major Components of the Circulatory System

HeartThe muscular organ that pumps blood via the CS to the lungs & the body

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12.1 - Major Components of the Circulatory System

HeartThe muscular organ that pumps blood via the C.S.

BloodBodily fluid in which blood cells are suspended - carries nutrients, oxygen, carbon dioxide, etc

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12.1 - Major Components of the Circulatory System

HeartThe muscular organ that pumps blood via the C.S.

Blood VesselsHollow tubes carrying blood to & from body tissues

BloodBodily fluid in which blood cells are suspended - carries nutrients, oxygen, carbon dioxide, etc

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Open & Closed CS

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12.1 - 2 Types of CS

Open Circulatory System

Closed Circulatory System

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12.1 - 2 Types of CS

Open Circulatory SystemA CS in which vessels open into the animal’s body cavity and makes direct contact with organs and tissues

Closed Circulatory System

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12.1 - Open & Closed CS

Open Circulatory SystemA CS in which vessels open into the animal’s body cavity and makes direct contact with organs and tissues. There is no distinction between the blood and the interstitial fluid (a solution surrounding cells of multicellular animals). The mixture of blood and the surrounding fluids is called hemolymph.

Closed Circulatory SystemA CS in which the circulating blood is contained within vessels and kept separate from the interstitial fluid.

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Open & Closed CS

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Heart Components

Study Fig. 12.2, page 480, and become fluent in identifying the components of the heart

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4 Chambers of the Heart

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Blood Vessels – 3 Types

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Blood Vessels – 3 Types

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Blood Vessels – 3 types

Arteries carry blood ______ from the heart. Smaller-diameter arteries are called arterioles

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Blood Vessels – 3 types

Arteries carry blood ______ from the heart. Smaller-diameter arteries are called arterioles

Veins carry blood _________ the heart. Smaller-diameter veins are called venules

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Blood Vessels – 3 types

Arteries carry blood ______ from the heart. Smaller-diameter arteries are called arterioles

Veins carry blood _________ the heart. Smaller-diameter veins are called venules

Capillaries transport nutrients & other materials from _________ to ________ cells and vice versa.

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Blood Vessels – 3 types

Arteries carry blood ______ from the heart. Smaller-diameter arteries are called arterioles

Veins carry blood _________ the heart. Smaller-diameter veins are called venules

Capillaries transport nutrients & other materials from _________ to ________ cells and vice versa. A network of capillaries joins the arteries and arterioles with venules and veins.

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Blood Vessels – 3 Types

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Arteries

• Arteries are highly elastic (what does this mean?)

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Arteries

• Arteries are highly elastic (what does this mean?)

- like elastic rubber bands – - they are flexible and expandable allowing a wave of blood to surge through it during the contraction of ventricles.

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Arteries

• Arteries are highly elastic (what does this mean?) - like elastic rubber bands – - they are flexible and expandable allowing a wave of blood to surge through it during the contraction of ventricles.

• When measuring your pulse, you feel a rhythmic expansion & contraction of an artery as blood moves through it

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Veins

Looking at the diagram …

• Veins have (thinner or thicker?) walls than arteries and a (smaller or larger?) inner circumference

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Veins

Looking at the diagram …

• Veins have (thinner or thicker?) walls than arteries and a (smaller or larger?) inner circumference

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Veins

Looking at the diagram …

• Veins have (thinner or thicker?) walls than arteries and a (smaller or larger?) inner circumference

• On the other hand, veins (are or aren’t) as elastic as arteries

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Veins

Looking at the diagram …

• Veins have (thinner or thicker?) walls than arteries and a (smaller or larger?) inner circumference

• On the other hand, veins (are or aren’t) as elastic as arteries

• So they can’t contract to help move blood back to the heart – the contraction muscles keeps the blood in the veins flowing to the heart

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Veins

Veins have one-way valves that prevent blood from flowing backward – even against the downward pull of gravity

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Capillaries

Capillaries are the smallest blood vessels

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Capillaries

Capillaries are the smallest blood vessels

The capillary wall is a single layer of cells are have an average diameter of 8 micro meters (8 millionths of a meter)

– just large enough for the largestblood cells to pass through

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Questions for the love of your Heart

Q 1, 2, 4, 6 – page 481

Read Page 483 and draw out figure 12.7 on Pg 483