Coordination 13.1 Flashcards
Internal Environment
Blood glucose concentration, temperature, cell pH and water potential
External environment
Temperature, humidity, light intensity, sounds
How does the body respond to changes in the environment?
It will produce an electrical signal (neurones) or a chemical signal (hormonal)
3 reasons why we need coordination
- Red blood cells deliver oxygen but cannot replicate so rely on haematopoietic stem cells to constantly produce them.
- Muscle cells need oxygen as they constantly respire but they cannot transport oxygen so require red blood cells to give it to them.
- Plant flowering must coordinate with the seasons so light sensitive chemicals enable plants to coordinate the development of flower buds depending on the amount of light its getting.
Homeostasis
This is a constant environment that is maintained by the body at resting state and this has to be maintained by all the organs by coordinating them.
Cell Signalling
This is used so that systems can coordinate activities of the whole cell. Cell signalling is when a cell releases a chemical which will take effect on another cell called a target cell. The chemical can travel short ranges like for neurones, their messages are neurotransmitters. For glands, their chemicals are hormones and can travel longer distances.
Plant Coordination
Plants don’t have a nervous system, so they respond to changes by plant hormones such as a plant growing towards the light.