Specialised Exchange System Flashcards
What does every organism need to do?
No matter what the size is, every organisms need to exchange stuff with the environment
What do cells need to take in? and excrete?
They need to take things like oxygen & glucose for aerobic respiration and other metabolic respiration. They also need to excrete waste products like carbon dioxide and urea.
Formula for volume of cylinder
(pie)(radius^2)(height)
Formula for volume of hemisphere
4/3 (pie)(radius^3)
Formula for sphere surface area
4(pie)(radius^2)
Why does it need to remove waste products from every cell?
To avoid damaging itself
How do substances diffuse in single-celled organisms?
Substances can diffuse directly into or out of the cell across the plasma membrane. The diffusion rate is quick because of the short distance the substances have to travel and because they have a high surface area : volume ratio
Why is the diffusion across the outer membrane in multicellular organisms slow?
> Some cells are deep within the body - there’s a big distance between them and the environments
Low surface area to volume ratio - its difficult to exchange enough substances to supply a large volume of animal through the small outer surface
They also have a higher metabolic rate, so they use up oxygen and glucose faster
What do multicellular organism use to absorb and excrete substances?
They use specialised exchange surfaces (like the alveioli in the lungs)
What are the three special feature that exchange surfaces have? and why do they have them?
> A large surface area
They’re thin
A good blood supply and ventilation
To improve their efficiency
Why do most exchange surfaces have a large surface are: volume ratio?
To overcome limitations of sa:v ratio of large organism and to improve their efficiency
Describe the root as having a high surface area
The cells on plants root grow into long ‘hairs’ which stick out into the soil. Each branch of a root will be covered in millions of these microscopic hairs.
This gives the roots a large surface area, which helps to increase the rate of absorptions of water (by osmosis) and mineral ions (by active transport) from the soil.
Why are most exchange surfaces thin?
Exchange surfaces are usually thin to decrease the distance that the substances being exchanged have to travel over, and so improve efficiency and making the process fast
Describe alveoli as being thin
The alveoli are the gas exchange surfaces in the lungs. Each alveolus is made from a single layer of thin, flat cells called the alveolar epithelium.
O2 diffuses out of the alveolar space into the blood. CO2 diffuses in the opposite directions.
The thin alveolar epithelium helps to decrease the distance over which O2, and CO2 diffusion takes place, which increases the rate of diffusion.
Why do most exchange surfaces have a good blood supply or are well ventilated ?
> They have a good blood supply so substances are constantly delivered to and removed from exchange surfaces which maintain a steep concentration gradient for diffusion
Ventilations maintains conc gradients and makes the process more efficient