homeostasis, feedback loops and temperature control Flashcards
What is homeostasis?
Homeostasis is processes within a complex organism to control all of the tissues and organs to keep the body stable
What is endocrinology?
Endocrinology is the study of hormones, their receptors and the intracellular signalling pathways they evoke
What are most homeostatic mechanisms controlled through?
The nervous and endocrine systems which are usually negative feedback systems
What are the two main components to homeostasis?
Behavioural and biological processes
What is the receptors job?
Receptors/sensors detect details in the internal environment, particularly the details which may cause damage to the environment or a specific component in it.
How many things can each receptor/sensor detect?
One which is why there is usually many in organisms.
What does the control centre do in a feedback loop?
Takes in information from the receptors and then decides on the best course of action to fix it. If something does need to be fixed it will send information to the effectors.
What do the effectors do in a feedback loop?
Effectors act on information given by the control centre and act to adjust whatever they have been told to.
What is a negative back loops role?
A negative feedback loop word on he principle that the body needs specific factors in specific ranges so if something has deviated from this range it works to fix it.
Why does the body regulate carbon dioxide?
The body needs to regulate carbon dioxide as it is needed in the body however if there is too much carbon dioxide it is toxic to the cells so it is very important to monitor the levels.
What would happen if the levels of carbon dioxide got too high?
If the levels of carbon dioxide got too high then this information would be noticed by the sensors and then passed on to the central nervous system. The central nervous system would then choose a corrective action to normalise the levels.
Why is maintaining a correct constant body temperature so important for organisms survival?
Maintaining a certain temperature is very important as the internal organs need to be at a constant temperature to survive.
What happens to most cells if the body was to rise above 45 degrees Celsius?
The majority of proteins in the cells would become inactive and will be unable to carry out their functions
What happens to the cells if they drop below 0 degrees?
The water in the cells would freeze and growth of ice crystals would then occur which causes disruption to the cell membrane and kills the organism.
What are the two key temperatures in an organism?
The shell temperature= the temp of the peripheral systems
The core temperature= the temperature that the core organs are kept at to work as efficiently as possible