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A level biology
A level bio paper 1
Exchange in organisms
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Cards (53)
How do single-celled organisms exchange substances?
Substances
diffuse
directly through the
membrane
from its immediate environment
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Why do multicellular organisms require transport systems?
Because most of their
cells
are
not
in direct contact with their immediate surroundings
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The smaller the animal...
The
greater
the
SA
:V ratio
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Describe the tracheal system of insects
Holes where gases diffuse -
spiracles
Main tracheal tube -
trachea
Smaller tracheal tubes -
trachioles
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How do insects maintain a steep rate of diffusion?
Trachioles are bathed in tracheal fluid that keep the
tracheal system
moist in order to maintain a
steep
concentration gradient
-Spiracles can close to prevent
water loss
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What adaptation do fish have to respire?
Gills
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What process do fish use to maximise respiration by maintaining a concentration gradient?
Counter current flow mechanism
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How does the countercurrent exchange system work?
The blood flows in the opposite direction to water passing the
gills
, which maintains a constant concentration of
oxygen
throughout
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What are the layers of a leaf cell
Waxy cuticle
, upper and lower epidermis,
palisade mesophyll
, spongy mesophyll, stomata and guard cells
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How are stomata adapted for their function?
- More
stomata
on the base of the
leaf
which is cooler and shaded, minimising water loss
-
Guard cells
control the state of passage depending on
water concentration
, meaning water won't be lost to transpiration
- They are only open during the day as
photosynthesis
can only occur in the presence of
sunlight
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How is a leaf adapted for gas exchange?
-
Air space
to allow
gas
movement
- Short
diffusion
pathway
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How do xerophytic plants reduce water loss?
Thick waxy cuticles
, Extensive root systems and thin needle-like spines all act to
reduce water
loss through transpiration via surface area
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What are the sections of the respiratory system?
The
trachea
, bronchi,
lungs
, bronchioles and alveoli
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How is the trachea adapted?
Cartilage rings
to keep airway open to maintain
reliable gas source
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How are the bronchioles adapted?
Lined with
goblet
cells that produce
mucus
to trap foreign particles
Ciliated epithelial
cells waft mucus up to be coughed up as phlegm or swallowed and destroyed by
stomach acid
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How does inspiration occur?
-The
diaphragm
moves down
-external
intercostal muscles
contract
-internal
intercostal muscles
relax
-rib
cage moves
upward
and outward
-increase in
thoracic
volume
-Atm. pressure >
thoracic
pressure causes air to
rush
in
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How does expiration occur?
-The
diaphragm
moves up
-external intercostal muscles
relax
-internal
intercostal
muscles
contract
-rib cage moves
downward
and in
-decrease in
thoracic
volume
-Thoracic
pressure > atm. pressure forcing
air
out
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What is the equation for pulmonary ventilation rate?
Tidal volume
x
breathing rate
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How are the alveoli adapted?
One cell thick
- Short diffusion pathway
Moist- Allows gases to
diffuse
Rich
blood supply
- Steep concentration gradient
Folded
- Large surface area
increases
rate of diffusion
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What enzymes are involved in digestion?
Amylase,
protease
,
lipase
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Where is amylase produced?
The
pancreas
and
salivary
glands
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Where is protease produced?
The
pancreas
and
stomach
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Where is
lipase
produced?
The
pancreas
and
small intestine
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How are carbohydrates digested?
First by
amylase
produced in the
salivary glands
, then by maltase, sucrase, and lactase to break down disaccharides into their constituent monosaccharides
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How are proteins digested?
-Endopeptidase
hydrolyses bonds in the middle of the polypeptide to
increase
surface area and make exopeptidase more efficient
-Exopeptidase
hydrolyses bonds at the end of the polypeptides
-Dipeptidase
hydrolyses dipeptides into individual amino acids
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How are lipids digested?
-Lipids = emulsified by
bile
• increases surface area produces
micelles
(lipid droplets)
-Micelles are broken down upon contact of the
epithelial lining
into monoglycerides and
fatty acids
, absorbed directly through the epithelial lining
-The
ER
recombines them into
triglycerides
-The
Golgi apparatus
modifies them into
chylomicrons
-exit via
exocytosis
into the
lacteal
/ the lymphatic system
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Structure of haemoglobin
Quaternary polypeptide
with 4 haem groups with Fe2+ to bind to
oxygen
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Haemoglobin with a high affinity to
oxygen
Take up
oxygen
more
readily
but lose it less readily (left side of oxy. dis. curve)
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Haemoglobin with a
low
affinity for
oxygen
Take up
oxygen less
readily but
lose
it more readily (right side of oxy. dis. curve)
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Explain the shape of the oxygen dissociation curve
Positive
correlation - each binding makes
subsequent
bindings easier
Curve plateaus
when all
four
binding sites are full
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What is the Bohr shift?
Shifts left for
low
concentration -
low
oxygen affinity
Shifts right for
high
concentration -
high
oxygen affinity
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What does a double circulatory system refer to?
A
double
circuit system, where
blood
travels from the heart to the lungs, then back to the lungs to be pumped around the body
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What is the name of the blood vessel that receives blood from the rest of the body?
Vena cava
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What is the name of the blood vessel that delivers blood to the body?
Aorta
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What is the name of the blood vessel that takes blood to the lungs?
Pulmonary artery
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What is the name of the blood vessel that takes blood to the heart from the lungs?
Pulmonary vein
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What is the name of the blood vessel that takes blood to the kidneys?
Renal artery
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What is the name of the blood vessel that takes blood back to the heart from the kidneys?
Renal vein
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What are the four chambers of the heart?
Right and left
atria
, right and left
ventricles
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What are the names of the valves between atria and ventricles?
Atrioventricular
(AV)
valves
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