Criado por DauntlessAlpha
mais de 10 anos atrás
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Questão | Responda |
What is mass transport? | An efficient system that carries substances to and from individual cells |
Why is mass transport necessary? | Can't use straightforward diffusion to absorb and excrete substances so need an efficient system to carry substances to and from individual cells |
Describe the structure of the a mammalian circulatory system | Made up of the heart and blood vessels (arteries, arterioles, veins and capillaries) |
Which vessels carry blood from and to the lungs? | From: Pulmonary vein To: Pulmonary artery |
What vessels carry blood to and from the body (from and to the heart)? | To: Aorta From: Vena cava |
What vessel carries blood from the body to the liver? | Hepatic artery |
What vessel carries blood from the liver to the vena cava? | Hepatic vein |
What vessel carries blood from the gut to the liver? | Hepatic portal vein |
What blood vessel carries blood from and to the kidneys (to the vena cava and from the body)? | From: Renal vein To: Renal artery |
Which blood vessel has the lowest pressure? | Vena Cava |
What does the blood transport? | Respiratory gases, products of digestion, metabolic wastes and hormones |
What vessels supply the heart with blood? | Right and left coronary arteries |
Describe the structure of the arteries and how it relates to their function | Thick muscle layer - can constrict and dilate to control flow of blood Thick elastic layer - can stretch and recoil to help maintain high bp and smooth pressure surges created by the heart beating Smooth endothelium - reduces friction Large overall thickness of the wall - Resists the pressure so that the vessel doesn't burst |
Describe the structure of arterioles and how it relates to their function | Muscle layer thicker than arteries - contraction of this muscle allows constriction of lumen which restricts the flow of blood and so controls its movement into the capillaries that supply the tissues with blood |
Describe the structure of the veins and how it's related to its function | Muscle layer thinner - lower pressure Elastic layer thinner - too low a pressure to create recoil Thickness of wall is lower - Pressure low so low risk of bursting Valves - To prevent backflow of blood due to low pressure |
Describe the structure of the capillaries and how this makes them adapted for their function | The endothelium is single cell thick and flattened - reduces diffusion pathway Narrow lumen - RBCs flattened and in contact with wall so short diffusion pathway and more time for diffusion due to slow passage of cells through capillary Small diameter - large SA:vol/short diffusion distance |
What is tissue fluid? | Fluid that surrounds cells in tissue - made from subs that leave the blood e.g. water, nutrients |
Explain what causes the decrease in water potential at the arterial end of the capillary | Loss of water due to hydrostatic pressure |
Explain what causes the increase in water potential towards the venous end of the capillary | Watter enters due to osmosis/ more -ve WP (in capillary) |
How is tissue fluid formed and how may it be returned to the circulatory system? | 1) Hydrostatic pressure of blood high at arterial end 2) Fluid/water pass out 3) while proteins remain 4)This lowers the WP 5) Water moves back into venous end of capilary 6) by osmosis/ diffusion 7) Lymph system collects any excess tissue fluid 8) and returns it to blood/cirulatory system |
What's one difference in the composition of blood plasma and tissue fluid? What causes this difference? | 1) Blood plama contains proteins (tissue fluid doesn't) 2) Proteins too large to pass through capillary walls |
What's the role of proteins in blood plasma in returning fluid to the capillary? | 1)Too large to pass through wall of capillary and 2)lower WP 3)causing water to move into capillary by osmosis |
What's the function of the lymphatic vessels? (in relation to tissue fluid) | 1) Drains excess tissue fluid (because not all reenters capillaries) and 2) transports it back into blood/circ system |
Explain how the active transport of mineral ions into xylem vessels in the roots results in water entering these vessels and then being moved up the xylem tissue | 1)WP in xylem reduced (by entry of ions); 2) Water potential gradient established between xylem and surrounding cells; 3) Plasma membranes of surrounding cells are partially permeable; 4) Water enters xylem by osmosis; 5) Volume of water in xylem increases; 6) Cannot move back due to gradient; Pressure in xylem increases (and 7) forces water upwards) |
Why does the presence of an air bubble in the xylem block the movement of water? | 1) Evaporation from leaves/ transpiration 2)Water in xylem under tension*/negative pressure 3) Water molecules cohere*/stick together/form hydrogen bonds 4) Water forms a single column 5) Air bubble breaks column / prevents cohesion |
Explain how water enters a plant root from the soil and travels through to the endodermis | 1) water enters root hair cells; 2) by osmosis; 3) because active uptake of mineral ions has created a WP gradient; 4) water moves through the cortex; 5) (by osmosis) down a WP gradient; 6) through cell vacuoles and cytoplasms / symplastic pathway; 7) through cell walls / apoplastic pathway; |
How is water used by a plant? | 1) (water is used in) the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis; 2) electrons from water enable ATP production/ produces O2 ; 3) (water can be used in) hydrolysis reactions within the plant; 4) to create turgor; 5) as a solvent for transport; 6) as a medium for chemical reactions; 7) component of cells / cytoplasm |
How does water move via the apoplastic and symplastic pathways from the soil to the xylem in a root? | Apoplastic – 1)Via cell walls / spaces external to cell membrane/ external to cytoplasm / between cells; 2) As far as endodermis / Casparian strip / layer of wax; 3) Caused by transpiration pull; 4) Cohesion / hydrogen-bonding between water molecules; Symplastic – 1) Through cell surface membrane (of epidermis /root hair cell) / ref. vacuoles membrane; 2) High to low WP; 3) Diffusion / osmosis; 4) Cell-to-cell via plasmodesmata / via strands of cytoplasm; 5) Secretion / active transport of ions into xylem by endodermis; OR Active uptake of ions from soil at epidermis; Lowers WP in xylem / increases osmosis into xylem |
Draw a labelled diagram of a dicot |
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