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Water Balance & Excretion. Osmoregulation. active regulation of the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells osmotic pressure = pressure resulting from a difference in solute concentration across a selectively permeable membrane. Osmoregulation. hyperosmotic hypoosmotic isoosmotic.
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Osmoregulation • active regulation of the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells • osmotic pressure = pressure resulting from a difference in solute concentration across a selectively permeable membrane
Osmoregulation • hyperosmotic • hypoosmotic • isoosmotic
Unicellular Organisms • water balance is often maintained by contractile vacuoles • video of Paramecium: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mTXRcbjuYGU
Excretion • eliminating waste is important for all living organisms
Types of Waste • wastes are eliminated through various organs: • lungs (CO2) • large intestine (solid wastes) • liver (transforms toxins for removal) • kidneys (soluble wastes)
Nitrogenous Wastes • mostly from deamination • animals that live in water can remove ammonia with lots of water • mammals, some reptiles, most amphibians form urea • birds and some invertebrates produce uric acid
Renal Blood Flow) • blood is brought to the kidneys by the renalarteries • filtered blood leaves the kidneys through the renalveins
The Urinary System • kidneys can hold up to 25% of the body’s blood at a time • kidneys filter the blood • urine (with wastes and toxins) is conducted to the bladder through the ureters
Kidney Structure Basic structure: • cortex • medulla • renal pelvis
Nephron • the functional unit of the kidney is the nephron • there are about 1 million nephrons in each kidney
Urine Formation • filtration • reabsorption • secretion • Simple overview of urine formation: • http://www.pennmedicine.org/encyclopedia/em_DisplayAnimation.aspx?gcid=000136&ptid=17
Filtration • higher blood pressure in glomerulus • water, ions, smaller dissolved molecules (glucose, amino acids, urea) can move through the walls of the glomerulus • your kidneys filter your entire blood plasma 65 times every day!
Reabsorption • ion pumps reabsorb Na+, K+, Cl- (active) • active transport proteins reabsorb amino acids, glucose • filtrate becomes hypoosmotic to interstitial fluid, so water is reabsorbed by osmosis and through aquaporins
Where? • a lot of reabsorption occurs in the proximal convoluted tubule • filtrate with high concentration of urea and other wastes enters loop of Henle and then distal convoluted tubule: • more water and ions (Na+& Cl-)are reabsorbed
Where (cont’d)? • collecting ducts are permeable to water but not salt ions, so more water is reabsorbed • at bottom of medulla, urea is reabsorbed through passive urea transporters (increasing concentration gradient…more water reabsorbed)
Secretion • H+ ions (active) to adjust blood pH (HCO3- is also reabsorbed to balance) • products of detoxified poisons (passive) • water-soluble drugs (passive) • nitrogen-containing wastes (such as small amounts of NH3) • in the proximal and distal convoluted tubules
Animations • Narrated animation on urine formation; good amount of detail: • http://davisplus.fadavis.com/scanlon6e/Animations/animations.cfm?exercise=NephronFiltration&title=Nephron%20Filtration • Narrated animation of structure & function; quite detailed: • http://bcs.whfreeman.com/thelifewire/content/chp51/51020.html
Other links… • Khan academy…this video starts off with the structure of the kidney & nephron, then goes into detail about the formation of urine (covered in 9.5) • http://www.khanacademy.org/video/the-kidney-and-nephron?playlist=Biology