Invertebrate Zoology
Lecture 3: Bauplans (cont.)
Lecture outline (summary)- Animal Bauplans
- Key features of body plans (cont.)
- Excretion and osmoregulation
- Circulation and Gas Exchange
Bauplans: key features (cont.)
- Excretion and osmoregulation
- Excretion and osmoregulation: overview
- Excretion, defined: ridding body of metabolic wastes
a)Carbon dioxide
b)Water (if in excess)
c)Nitrogenous and other wastes (=many are toxic)
- Excretion usually tied to osmoregulation
- CO2 often excreted separately
- Excretion ≠removal of solid waste
- Nitrogenous wastes & water conservation
- Protein digestion nitrogenous wastes
- Excess amino acids are “deaminated”
- Amine groups incorporated into waste molecules
a)Discuss differences among these molecules in terms of how well each dissolves in water, implications for aquatic vs. terrestrial existence, and toxicity.
- Osmoregulation and habitat
- Fig. 3.21 (understand!)
a)Note that arrows in B and C show net movement.
- What if osmolarity changes?
a)Example: estuary
Osmoconformers
Osmoregulators
b)Most osmoconformers can osmoregulate (a bit)
c)Most osmoregulators have limits to osmoregulation
d)Osmoregulation can occur at the cellular level
Example: Cell placed in hypotonic solution might initially swell, and then respond by excreting salts. (Why would this help?)
- Specialized structures
- Water expulsion vesicles (as in various Protista)
a)Accumulate water expel it to the outside
b)Requires energy. Mechanism?
c)Possibly in Porifera?
- Nephridia:
a)Tubules acquire water/and or ions at one end and excrete wastes through pores (usually in body wall; wastes exit body)
b)Protonephridia: proximal end closed
c)Metanephridia: proximal end open
- Circulation and gas exchange
- Overview
- Nutrients, wastes, and gases move through the body
- Transport systems allow for movement beyond diffusion
- Origin of fluid for transport
a)Internal body fluids; external fluids (i.e. Porifera)
b)Movement of fluids through/within body cavity may occur instead of or in addition to movement within a “true” circulatory system.
- Circulatory systems (true)
- CLOSED: blood remains within vessels
a)Associated with well-developed coelomic cavity
b)Composition of blood vs. coelomic fluid differs
c)Exchange of dissolved materials occurs within capillary beds (single cell layer to promote diffusion)
- OPEN: vessels exist, but open into hemocoel
a)Associated with reduced coelom,peritoneum
b)Less efficient than closed system?
Additional functions (i.e. hydrostatic)
Secondary systems have evolved to compensate
- Hearts and other pumping mechanisms
- Pump blood/hemolymph; maintain blood pressure
- Several types
a)Contractile vessels (Annelida)
b)Ostiate hearts (Arthropoda)
Allows entry of hemolymph back into heart from the hemocoel
c)Chambered hearts (Mollusca)
- Other key concepts (circulation)
- Myogenic vs. neurogenic control of contraction
- In general, freshly oxygenated blood/hemolymph is first circulated to the head.
- Vessel diameter and flow
a)Paradox: diameter flow rate
Problem: need low flow at capillaries (why?)
Solution: total cross-sectional area at capillaries flow rate!
- Gas exchange and transport
- O2 uptake from air or water over moist membrane (body surface or specialized structures)
a)Why moist?
- O2often diffuses into a “circulatory body fluid”, then to cells
a)CO2 moves in opposite direction
- Body fluids have relatively low O2-carrying capacity
a)Respiratory pigments increase that capacity
O2 binds to a metal, usually copper or iron
- CO2 primarily converted to carbonic acid and bicarbonate
a)Requires carbonic anhydrase
b)CO2 + H2O H2CO3 H+ +HCO3-
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