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The Circulatory System. Transporting nutrients, waste, dissolved gases and other chemicals to and from the cells of the body. For warm blooded organisms - also helps maintain body temperature. Organisms without a circulatory system.
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The Circulatory System Transporting nutrients, waste, dissolved gases and other chemicals to and from the cells of the body. For warm blooded organisms - also helps maintain body temperature.
Organisms without a circulatory system • Single celled organisms – in direct contact with their environment • Simple multi-cellular organisms – thin layers of cells, thus diffusion is enough to transport nutrients and waste.
Components • All circulatory systems have: • A fluid to carry dissolved particles • Tubes for the fluid to flow • A pump that pushes the fluid through the tubes
Types of Circulatory Systems - OPEN • Found in most invertebrates • Fluid – hemolymph (blood and tissue fluid) • One or more hearts pump the hemolymph through vessels then empties into sinuses where it bathes the tissues directly • When the heart(s) relax hemolymph returns to the heart
Types of Circulatory Systems- Closed • Found in all vertebrates and some invertebrates (ex. earth worms) • Fluid usually blood • Blood is pumped by one or more hearts and is always contained in vessels • thus to get to cells particles have to diffuse across the blood vessel through the extracellular fluid and across the cell membrane
Various Hearts • 2,3 and 4 chambered hearts • Atria always receive blood from the body • Ventricles always pump blood to the body • Chambers are separated by a wall of tissue called a septum
Types of Circulatory Sytems-Closed – Two Circuit • Circulation to lungs, separate from circulation to the rest of the body • Pulmonary Circuit – heart to lungs and back • Systemic Circuit – heart to all other body tissues and back
HWK • Read 11.1 pg 478-481 • Questions pg 481 #1-6