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Animal Form & Function.

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Presentation on theme: "Animal Form & Function."— Presentation transcript:

1 Animal Form & Function

2 Question 1: Tissue Types
Epithelial: Covers surface of body, lines body cavities. Ex. Skin and stomach tissue Connective: Holds organs in place, supports body. Ex. tendons and ligaments Muscular: Generate physical force and movement Nervous: Controls, coordinates body movement by detecting change and responding. Ex. Brain and spinal cord

3 Question 2: Bioenergetics
Flow of ENERGY through an animal Food digested & absorbed Glucose used to create ATP (cellular respiration) Nutrients also used for cell repair, lipid synthesis, body growth, etc

4 Question 3a: Size vs Metabolic Rate
Metabolic Rate: Amount of energy used per unit time Amount of energy to maintain each gram of body weight INVERSELY related to body size Smaller animals have higher metabolic rate  higher breathing/heart rates *Link between surface area and volume ratios in endotherms

5 Question 3b: BMR and SMR BMR: Nongrowing, non stressed ENDOTHERM at rest SMR: Non growing, non stressed ECTOTHERM at rest (determined at a specific temperature)

6 Question 4: Energy Budgets
Illustrates how animals allocate energy & resources depending on individual needs as a species What’s Important? Size Gender Endotherm vs ectoterm Behaviours (ex. mating, territoriality)

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8 Question 5a: Homeostasis
Maintaining the INTERNAL balance of an organism Ex. Water regulation, body temperature, hormone control

9 Question 5b: Negative vs Positive Feedback
Negative: Change triggers responses to counteract any more changes  return to “normal” conditions Ex. Insulin & blood sugar levels

10 Positive: Triggers amplification of a change (pushes away from homeostasis)
Ex. Oxytocin release during childbirth End point = baby is born!

11 Question 6a: Endotherms vs Ectotherms
Endotherms: Use metabolic heat to maintain constant body temperature Ectotherms: Gain/maintain heat from their environment (have LOW metabolic rate) 6b. Pros and Cons? What do you think? Discuss and add your thoughts in the space provided.

12 Question 7: Countercurrent Heat Exchange
Arteries carry warm blood in parallel to veins (cooler blood) down extremities Venous blood warmed by arterial blood as it cools farther from animal’s core *Minimizes heat loss! *Animals usually immersed in water (ex. dolphins)

13 Question 8: Heat Exchange Terminology
Conduction- losing heat through physical contact with another object or body Convection- losing heat through the movement of air or water molecules across the skin Radiation- transfer of heat from one object to another, with no physical contact involved Evaporation- losing heat through the conversion of water to gas (evaporation of sweat)

14 Question 9b: Behavioural Responses
Hibernation: Decrease in body core temperature (decreased metabolism) -Conserves energy during winter months Migration: Movement to more favourable environment

15 Question 10: Torpor, Hibernation, Estivation
Torpor: Adaptations to save energy by decreasing metabolism & activity Estivation: During hot weather (extreme heat, low water availability) Hibernation: Long term torpor  extreme decrease in body temp

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