Introduction to Physiological Principles

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Animal Physiology Zool 4230   General objectives:
Advertisements

Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Human Anatomy & Physiology SEVENTH EDITION Elaine N. Marieb Katja Hoehn PowerPoint.
Overview of Anatomy and Physiology Anatomy – the study of the structure of body parts and their relationships to one another Gross or macroscopic.
Biology 364 – Animal Physiology
Introduction: Themes in the Study of Life
Chp 1 Function on the Ecological Stage
CHAPTER 50 AN INTRODUCTION TO ECOLOGY AND THE BIOSPERE Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Section A: The Scope of.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings C h a p t e r 1 An Introduction to Anatomy and Physiology.
1 Welcome to Biol 178 Principles of Biology Course goals Course information Text Grading Syllabus Lab Chapter Organization.
Principles of Animal Physiology
Zoology Zoon = animal Logos = study of Zoology = study of animals
Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Fundamentals of Anatomy & Physiology SIXTH EDITION Frederic H. Martini PowerPoint.
Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Dee Unglaub Silverthorn, Ph.D. H UMAN P HYSIOLOGY PowerPoint ® Lecture Slide.
POWERPOINT ® LECTURE SLIDE PRESENTATION by ZARA OAKES, MS, The University of Texas at Austin Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin.
Themes in the Study of Life
Biology in the 21st Century
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings Introduction  _______ and __________ affect your life everyday  ________.
Chapter 1 The Scope of Biology Section 2: Biology explores life in its diverse forms Section 3: Ten themes unify the study of life.
AP Biology AP BIOLOGY BIG IDEAS.
Course Structure Exam Structure & Review ADVANCED PLACEMENT BIOLOGY.
Unifying themes connect concepts from many fields of biology.
All levels of life have systems of parts that interact A system is group of related parts that interact to form a whole.
Studying Life Vodcast 1.3 Unit 1: Introduction to Biology.
The Unifying Themes of Biology
Guiding Question: What big ideas will I take away from biology?
Bell-Ringer Activity Danielle Donaldson 10 th Grade Biology.
P416 Comparative Animal Physiology Fall Semester, 2005 Dr. Michael S. Finkler.
Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Fundamentals of Anatomy & Physiology SIXTH EDITION Frederic H. Martini PowerPoint.
 Scientific evidence shows that life on Earth had one origin or multiple origins?
1.2 Unifying Themes of Biology TEKS 4B, 7E, 10A, 10C, 11A The student is expected to: 4B investigate and explain cellular processes, including homeostasis,
1.2 Unifying Themes of Biology KEY CONCEPT Unifying themes connect concepts from many fields of biology.
1.2 Unifying Themes of Biology KEY CONCEPT Unifying themes connect concepts from many fields of biology.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Evolution, Biodiversity and Extinctions.
1.2 Unifying Themes of Biology KEY CONCEPT Unifying themes connect concepts from many fields of biology.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint Lectures for Biology, Seventh Edition Neil Campbell and Jane Reece.
1.1 The Study of Life KEY CONCEPT Biology is the study of all forms of life.
Life Science. Explain that cells are the basic unit of structures and function of living organisms. Cells are the basic unit of structures of living organisms.
The Study of Life Chapter Biology. KEY CONCEPT Biology is the study of all forms of life.
1.1 The Study of Life KEY CONCEPT Biology is the study of all forms of life.
Introduction: Themes in the Study of Life. Topics, Concepts, and Themes Topics are the subject areas Concepts are the most important ideas that form our.
CSCOPE Unit: 09 Lesson: 01.  Be prepared to share your response to the following: ◦ Biological evolution happens at the __________ level, not the individual.
AP Biology AP BIOLOGY BIG IDEAS.
Principals of General Zoology (Zoo-103)
All levels of life have systems of related parts and biologists study many different types of systems. A system is an organized group of interacting parts.
All levels of life have systems of related parts.
Article or Fact Video clip Question.
All levels of life have systems of related parts.
All levels of life have systems of related parts.
Outline 1-3 Studying Life
All levels of life have systems of related parts.
Unifying Themes of Biology
All levels of life have systems of related parts.
All levels of life have systems of related parts.
All levels of life have systems of related parts.
All levels of life have systems of related parts.
All levels of life have systems of related parts.
All levels of life have systems of related parts.
All levels of life have systems of related parts.
All levels of life have systems of related parts.
So what is biology all about?
All levels of life have systems of related parts.
All levels of life have systems of related parts.
All levels of life have systems of related parts.
So what is biology all about?
Biological Evolution and Environmental Factors
All levels of life have systems of related parts.
All levels of life have systems of related parts.
All levels of life have systems of related parts.
1. Systems A system is an organized group of interacting parts. A cell is a system of chemicals and processes. A body system includes organs that interact.
Principals of General Zoology (Zoo-103)
Presentation transcript:

Introduction to Physiological Principles

Our teaching team

Grading for the first term * ATTENDANCE IN ALL LABS IS MANDATORY. **MIDTERMS: Combinations of multiple choice, short answers, long answers. Note: ALL midterms, class presentations, research paper and lab requirements must be completed to obtain a passing grade in the course.

Research Paper Use peer-reviewed journal papers (since 2005) as source of your research paper. 3 - 5 word-processed pages (not including references or figures/tables). Structure : Title page, Abstract/Summary, Main text (depending on the topic you selected, you can have several subheadings in this section), Conclusion, References, Tables, List of figures and figures. The grading criteria: originality and relevance of the topic; thorough understanding of the cited papers; clarity of presentation; organization of the presentation in an easy to follow/understood format.

Physiology “The study of how animals work” Knut Schmidt-Nielsen (1915–2007) Structure and function of various parts How these parts work together Diversity of animals More than 1 million species live on Earth Unifying themes Apply to all physiological processes

Physiological Subdisciplines Based on Biological level of organization Process that causes physiological variation Ultimate goals of the research Many physiological questions encompass elements from each subdiscipline

Biological Level of Organization Organismal physiology Systems physiology Ecological physiology Cell and molecular physiology Integrative physiology Figure 1.2

Biological Level of Organization Physiologists often study processes at more than one level Reductionism – understand a system by studying the function of its parts Emergence – the whole is more than the sum of its parts

Process that Causes Physiological Variation Developmental physiology Change as animal grows Environmental physiology Change in response to environment Evolutionary physiology Change due to natural selection

Ultimate Goals of the Research Pure physiology No specific goal, other than knowledge Applied physiology Medical physiology Comparative physiology August Krogh principle – “For every biological system there is an organism on which it can be most conveniently studied”

Unifying Themes in Physiology Physiological processes obey physical and chemical laws Physiological processes are usually regulated Homeostasis – maintenance of internal constancy Physiological phenotype is a product of genotype and environment Genotype – genetic makeup Phenotype – morphology, physiology, and behavior Genotype is the product of evolution

Physics and Chemistry Physical properties of cells and tissue are linked to structure and function (linked to molecular structure) Molecular interactions are governed by chemical laws Thermodynamics and kinetics Electrical laws describe membrane function; especially excitable cells Membrane potential used to send signals within and between cells (i.e. nerves and muscles)

Physics and Chemistry Body size influences physiological patterns Allometric scaling Figure 1.3

Physiological Regulation Strategies for coping with changing conditions Conformers – allow internal conditions to change with external conditions Regulators – maintain relatively constant internal conditions regardless of external conditions

Homeostasis Maintenance of internal conditions in the face of environmental perturbations Animals initiate specific responses to control/regulate a particular variable Some strategies are effective in the short term Some strategies require significant resources and longer time to take effect Some stressors are predictable (often cyclic) Cyrcadian Sesonal Lunar cycles

Homeostasis Controlled by feedback loops or reflex control pathways Antagonistic controls – independent regulators with opposite effects Negative feedback loops Positive feedback loops Figure 1.4

Phenotype, Genotype, and the Environment Phenotype is a product of genotype and its interaction with the environment Genotype – genetic makeup Phenotype – morphology, physiology, and behavior

Factors Influencing Phenotype Figure 1.1

Phenotypic plasticity Single genotype generates more than one phenotype depending on environmental conditions. Can be irreversible or reversible Irreversible Polyphenism – developmental plasticity Reversible Acclimation – under laboratory conditions Acclimatization – natural environment Figure 1.5

Phenotypic Plasticity - Polyphenism

Physiology and Evolution Diversity of anatomic and physiologic strategies animals use to cope with their environment Two types of questions Proximate cause How did these develop? Ultimate cause Why are these changes helpful?

Adaptation Two distinct meanings Change in a population over evolutionary time (i.e., many generations) Most common usage Definition used in this book Synonym for acclimation Many argue this is an incorrect usage

Basis for Evolution and Natural Selection Variation among individuals for specific traits Traits must be heritable Traits must increase fitness That is, must increase reproductive success Relative fitness of different genotypes depends on the environment If the environment changes, the trait may no longer be beneficial

Not All Differences are Adaptations Genetic drift Random changes in the frequency of genotypes over time Independent of adaptive evolution Most common in small populations For example, forest fire resulting in founder effect

Evolutionary Relationships Despite the diversity in animal form and function, there are many similarities Common evolutionary ancestors Closely related species share more features than distantly related species Understanding evolution is necessary to understanding physiological diversity

Unifying Themes in Physiology Table 1.1