Lab 9: Animal Biology: Respiratory and Circulatory Systems Flashcards
What is the byproduct of fermentation
lactic acid
What would happen if your body only relied on diffusion to supply oxygen to your cells
- only the outermost layers of your skin would receive enough oxygen to survive, diffusion would be too slow to supply any of the deeper layers of your body
How does the respiratory and circulatory system work to supply oxygen to our bodies
- respiratory: increase absorption of oxygen into the body by greatly increasing the surface area for gas exchange (gills/lungs) and constantly bringing a fresh supply of water or air in contact with these surfaces (breathing in and out).
- circulatory: use a muscular heart to circulate blood within the body so that every cell is efficiently supplied with needed nutrients and wastes are efficiently removed. in both systems the exchange surfaces are kept as thin as possible (1-2 cells thick) so that diffusion distances are minimised
how do the partial pressures of O2 and CO2 in blood change from when it enters the tissue capillaries to when it exits those tissue capillaries? Explain why these changes occurred with consideration of the partial pressure gradients
O2: decreases greatly
CO2: increases slightly
- at the site of exchange: there is less O2 in the tissue cells than in the blood and more CO2 in the tissue cells than in the blood. Due to the pressure gradients solutes will dissolve across both sides (O2 into the tissue and CO2 out of the tissue).
Why do tissue cells have low O2 and high CO2 partial pressures? What makes the partial pressures of O2 so variable among different tissues (0-40 mmHg)
These cells “use up” a lot of O2 to create ATP through cellular respiration. O2 partial pressure is variable depending on tissue type because some may expend more energy than others (example: while running, leg muscles expend more energy than digestive tissues). CO2 is high because it is part of the cellular respiration process
The blood leaving the tissue capillaries is low in O2 and high in CO2. What happens to this blood as it passes through the lung capillaries?
The blood will become reoxygenated. By the partial pressure gradient, O2 will diffuse across the lung capillary wall into the blood and CO2 will diffuse out of the blood.
The larger the partial pressure graident of O2 between the alveoli and the lung capillaries the more quickly oxygen will difusse into our blood. How do we manage to maintain such a high concentration of oxygen in our alveoli when oxygen is constantly diffusing out of the alveoli and into the blood?
There is less O2 in our alveoli than in the air we breath in, meaning O2 will diffuse into the alveoli from the air and replenish what is being diffused out into the blood.
List 3 physiological response of your body to exercise, and explain how each one increases oxygen deliver to your muscles.
- increase heart rate: more blood and O2 reaches muscles quicker
- switch to mouth breathing: air can reach lungs faster (path of least resistance)
- body warms up and gas exchange becomes more efficient
list all the structures and capillaries a red blood cell will visit as it takes one round trip through the mammalian circulatory system
systemic capillaries, systemic veins, vena cava, r. atrium, r. ventricle, pulmonary arteries, pulmonary capillaries, pulmonary veins, l. atrium, l. ventricle, aorta, systemic arteries, systemic capillaries.
What is causing the pulse felt against your wrist
- atrial and ventricular contraction forces blood through the vessels
- blood is pushed through the arteries and the arterial walls expand and contract in response
Why are valves necessary for returning venous blood to the heart?
The blood pressure in the veins isnt sufficient enough to drive the blood back up to the heart against gravity. Muscles squeeze the veins to push the blodo back up and valves prevent blood from falling back down and pooling in the feet
What circulatory problem are plane exercises designed to prevent? Explain
- Deep vein thrombosis: blood clot in deep leg veins
- stretching and wiggling lower extremities contract your legs and help to return deoxygenated blood back to your heart
Explain how the diaphragm helps us breathe.
Inhalation: diaphragm contracts and moves downward, lowering pressure in the lung cavity and
increasing volume. air flows into the lungs in response to the change in pressure
Exhalation: diaphragm relaxes and moves back upwards, decreasing volume and increasing pressure
in the lung cavity. air flows out of the lungs in response to the change in pressure
List all of the structural components that an oxygen molecule passes through, as it travels from your nostril into your blood.
nostril, epiglottis, larnyx, trachea, bronchus, bronchiole, alveoli, capillaries
define: vital capacity
- the maximum amount of air that you can expel in one breath