Exchange Flashcards
What are characteristics of specialised exchange surfaces?
- A large surface area relative to the volume of the organism which increases the rate of exchange
- Very thin so that the diffusion distance is short and therefore materials cross the exchange surface rapidly.
- Selectively permeable to allow selected materials to cross
- Movement of the environmental medium to maintain a diffusion gradient.
- A transport system to ensure the movement of the internal medium in order to maintain a diffusion gradient.
What is the equation for diffusion?
diffusion = (surface area x difference in concentration) / distance
Why are specialised exchange surfaces often located inside an organism?
- Being thin, specialised exchange surfaces are easily damaged and dehydrated.
How do single-celled organisms undergo gas exchange?
- Have small metabolic requirements and have a small surface area : volume ratio so gases move by diffusion
Describe the respiratory system of an insect
- Insects have an internal network of tubes called tracheae, supported by strengthened rings to prevent them from collapsing.
- The trachea divide into smaller dead-end tubes called tracheoles, which extend throughout all the body tissues of the insect.
- They have tiny pores called spiracles on their sides where gas enters and leaves
How are respiratory gases moved in and out of the tracheal system?
- ALONG A DIFFUSION GRADIENT -> when cells are respiring oxygen is used up and carbon dioxide is produced which creates a diffusion gradient that causes oxygen to diffuse into the cells and carbon dioxide to diffuse out of the cells.
- MASS TRANSPORT -> the contraction of muscles in insects can squeeze the trachea enabling mass movements of air in and out. This further speeds up the exchange of respiratory gases.
- THE ENDS OF THE TRACHEOLES ARE FILLED WITH WATER -> During periods of activity where muscle cells respire anaerobically and release lactic acid, the water potential of the cell decreases. As a result water in the tracheoles moves into the cell by osmosis. The water in the ends of the tracheoles decreases in volume and in doing so draws air further into them. This means the final diffusion pathway is in a gas rather than a liquid and therefore diffusion is more rapid. This increase the rate at which air is moved in the tracheoles but leads to greater water evaporation.
How are insects adapted for gas exchange?
- Water filled tracheole ends
- Muscles contract to decrease the volume of trachea to push air out and then relax to move air pack in.
- Spiracles can be opened and closed by a valve.
- Tracheoles extend throughout the body tissue of insect. This means there is a short diffusion distance from a tracheole to any body cell.
How are insects adapted to have minimal water loss?
- Small surface area : volume ratio to minimise the area over which water is lost.
- Waterproof coverings over their body surfaces. In the case of insects this covering is a rigid outer skeleton of chitin that is covered with a waterproof cuticle
- Spiracles are the openings of the tracheae and can be closed to reduce water loss. This conflicts with the need for oxygen and so occurs largely when the insect is at rest.
Describe the structure of the gills
- The gills are located behind the head of the fish.
- They are made up of gill filaments which are stacked up in a pile.
- At right angle to these are the gill lamellae, which increase the surface area of the gills.
Describe the movement of water in fish
- Water is taken in through the mouth and forced over the gills and out through an opening on each side of the body.
- The flow of water over the gill lamellae and the flow of blood within are in opposite directions which is called Countercurrent flow.
Countercurrent exchange principle explanation
- Counterflow is when the direction of flow of blood is the opposite direction of the flow of water.
- It means that there is always a higher concentration of oxygen in the water than in the blood throughout the length of the lamellae and so there is always a concentration gradient throughout the length of the lamellae.
- This means that oxygen is always moving into the blood by diffusion.
- As a result 80% of oxygen in blood in absorbed
What is physical digestion?
- The break down of large food into smaller pieces by means of structures such as teeth.
- It also provides a larger surface area for chemical digestion.
Explain the human digestive system briefly.
- Oral cavity where teeth mechanically digest food and where salivary glands release amylase which chemically digest starch into maltose
- The oesophagus carries food to the stomach via peristalsis
- The stomach is a muscular sac with an inner layer that produces enzymes. Its role is to store and digest food, especially proteins.
- The small intestine is made up of three parts: the duodenum, jejunum and ileum.
- The ileum is a long muscular tube, which has walls and glands which produce and release enzymes. The inner walls of the ileum are folded into villi, with a larger surface area.
- The large intestine absorbs water.
- The rectum is where faeces is stored before being removed via the anus.
- The pancreas is a large gland below the stomach which produced pancreatic juice containing enzymes.
What enzymes are involved in carbohydrate digestion? (in order)
- Amylase is produced in the mouth and the pancreas. It is released by salivary glands into the mouth and released into the small intestine from the pancreas. Amylase hydrolyses the alternate glycosidic bonds of the starch molecule to produce the disaccharide maltose. It also contains mineral salts that help to maintain the ph at around neutral.
- Maltase is produced by the epithelial cells in the lining of the ileum and released there. It is referred to as membrane-bound disaccharidase. It hydrolyses maltose into alpha glucose.
- Sucrase and lactase are also enzymes which are involved in the hydrolysation reaction with the complimentary substrate.
What is emulsification?
- Lipids are split into tiny droplets called micelles by bile salts, which are produced by the liver. It increases the surface area of the lipids to increase the rate of enzyme action.
- One end of the bile salt molecule is soluble in fat (lipophilic) but not in water (hydrophobic). The other end is soluble in water (hydrophilic) but not in fat (lipophobic).
- Bile salt molecules therefore arrange themselves with their lipophilic ends in fat droplets, leaving their lipophobic ends sticking out.
- In this way they prevent fat droplets from sticking to each other to form large droplets, leaving only tiny ones.