Responding to change. All living organisms must be able to detect changes
in their enviroment and respond appropriately. Changes in the enviroment
are called stimuli. A stimulus may be either external or internal
Sensitivity; the ability to respond appropriately to stimuli, is one of the characteristic features of
life. Each organism has its own specific type of sensitivity that improves its chances of survival
In large multicellular organsims stimuli are usually detected in sense organs which
contain specialised cells called receptors that are particulary sensitive to specific stimuli
Structures that bring about a particular response to
a stimulus are called effectors. The sense organs
and effectors may be in different parts of the body.
Responses usually involve the coordinated ctions of
many different parts of the body. To achieve this
coordination, one part of the body must be able to
pass information to another
Tropisms; are responses to directional stimuli that help
maintain the roots and shoots of flowering plants in a
favourable enviroment. The plant body parts repond to a
stimulus by growing either towards or away from it. If the
directional stimulus is light, the response is called
phototropism, if gravity, it is called geotropism, and if water, it
is called hydrotropism
Kineses and taxes are both forms of simple behavioural
responses which help to keep and individual animal, such as a
woodlouse in a favourable enviroment. A kinesis is a random
movement in which the rate is related to the intensity of the
stimulus but not is direction. There are two main types;
Orthokinesis; invloves changes in speed of movement,
Klinokinesis; involes changes in the rate of turning.
A taxis is a movement is response to a directional
stimulus. Movements towards the stimulus are positive;
those away from the stimulus are negative