Biology paper 2

    Cards (333)

    • Homeostasis
      The maintenance of a constant internal environment
    • What homeostasis controls in the human body
      • Blood glucose concentration
      • Body temperature
      • Water levels
    • Control systems
      • Receptors - cells that detect stimuli
      • Coordination centres - process the information received from the receptors
      • Effectors - bring about responses to bring the conditions in the body back to optimum levels
    • Response to a stimulus
      1. Receptor cells convert a stimulus into an electrical impulse
      2. Electrical impulse travels along sensory neurons to the central nervous system
      3. Information is processed and the appropriate response is coordinated
      4. Electrical impulse is sent along motor neurons to effectors
      5. Effectors carry out the response
    • Reflex
      Automatic responses which take place before you have time to think
    • Reflex arc
      1. Stimulus is detected by receptors
      2. Impulses are sent along a sensory neuron
      3. In the CNS the impulse passes to a relay neuron
      4. Impulses are sent along a motor neuron
      5. The impulse reaches an effector resulting in the appropriate response
    • Synapse
      The gaps between two neurons
    • Reaction time
      How long it takes you to respond to a stimulus
    • Components of the brain
      • Cerebral cortex
      • Cerebellum
      • Medulla
    • Challenges in investigating brain function and treating brain damage/disease
      • It is complex and delicate
      • It is easily damaged
      • Drugs given to treat diseases cannot always reach the brain because of the membranes that surround it
      • It is not fully understood which part of the brain does what
    • Methods used by neuroscientists to map brain function
      1. Studying patients with brain damage
      2. Electrically stimulating different parts of the brain
      3. Using MRI scanning techniques
    • Structures within the eye
      • Retina
      • Optic nerve
      • Sclera
      • Cornea
      • Iris
      • Ciliary muscles and suspensory ligaments
    • Accommodation
      1. To focus on a near object: Ciliary muscles contract, suspensory ligaments loosen, lens becomes thicker and more curved
      2. To focus on a distant object: Ciliary muscles relax, suspensory ligaments tighten, lens becomes thinner
    • Myopia
      Short sightedness - the lens is too curved, so distant objects appear blurry
    • Hyperopia
      Long sightedness - the lens is too flat, so it cannot refract light enough
    • Treatment methods for eye defects
      • Spectacle lenses
      • Contact lenses
      • Laser eye surgery
      • Replacement lens
    • Thermoregulatory centre

      • Monitors and controls body temperature
      • Has receptors that monitor the temperature of the blood
      • Has receptors in the skin that send impulses to the thermoregulatory centre
    • If body temperature becomes too high
      Sweat is produced from sweat glands, vasodilation occurs
    • If body temperature decreases too much

      Sweating stops, skeletal muscles contract rapidly (shivering), hairs stand on end, vasoconstriction occurs
    • Endocrine system
      Communication system that sends hormones (chemical messengers) around the body
    • Glands that make up the endocrine system
      • Pituitary gland
      • Pancreas
      • Thyroid
      • Adrenal gland
      • Ovary
      • Testes
    • Compared to the nervous system, the hormonal system is much slower but it acts for longer
    • Control of blood glucose concentration
      The concentration of glucose in your blood needs to be kept within a certain limit because glucose is needed by cells for respiration. It is controlled by the pancreas.
    • Pituitary gland
      Secretes anti-diuretic hormone (ADH)
    • Community
      Many different populations interact in the same habitat
    • Adrenal gland
      • Secretes adrenaline
      • Involved in the 'fight or flight' response (the body's response to stressful situations)
    • Ecosystem
      The interaction of a community with non-living (abiotic) parts of the environment
    • Ovary
      • Secretes oestrogen
      • Involved in the menstrual cycle and the development of female secondary sexual characteristics
    • Testes
      • Secretes testosterone
      • Involved in the production of sperm and the development of male secondary sexual characteristics
    • Organisms
      • Adapted to live in the conditions of their environment
    • The blood transports the hormone to a target organ or tissue where it has an effect
    • Competition
      Can be within a species or between different species
    • Control of Blood Glucose Concentration
      1. Eating foods that contain carbohydrates increases the glucose levels in the blood
      2. If the glucose levels are too high, the pancreas produces the hormone insulin
      3. Insulin binds to cell in target organs (muscles and liver) causing glucose to move from the blood into muscle cells for respiration and excess glucose to be converted into glycogen which is stored in the liver
      4. The blood glucose concentration is reduced
      5. If glucose levels decrease, the pancreas produces the hormone glucagon
      6. Glucagon binds to to the liver cells causing glycogen to be broken down into glucose
      7. Glucose is released into the blood, increasing the blood glucose concentration
    • Things plants may compete for
      • Light
      • Space
      • Water
      • Mineral ions
    • When blood glucose levels increase/decrease

      A hormone is secreted to oppose the change
    • Things animals may compete for
      • Space
      • Food
      • Water
      • Mating partners
    • Your blood glucose concentration is kept constant through using these two hormones (insulin and glucagon). They work in a negative feedback loop
    • Interdependence
      Organisms in a community depend on other organisms for vital services like food, shelter and reproduction
    • Type 1 diabetes

      The pancreas cannot produce enough insulin
    • The removal or addition of a species to the community can affect the populations of others greatly, as it changes prey or predator numbers
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