AP Biology Unit 8A (Animal Form and Function)
Organ
A combination of different tissues that form a structural and functional unit
Organ System
A group of organs that cooperate to perform the major activities of the body
Stimulus
A thing or event that evokes a specific functional reaction in a cell, organ, or tissue.
Metabolic Rate
Amount of energy an animal uses in a unit of time; determined by an animal's heat loss and the amount of O2 consumed and CO2 produced
Ectotherms
Animals that gain heat from external sources; use less energy, but cannot survive in wide temperature ranges (invertebrates, fish, amphibians, retiles). Regulate body temperature using behavior (metabolism slows in cold temperatures)
Endotherms
Animals that generate heat from their internal metabolism; use more energy, but survive at wider temperature ranges (birds, mammals)
nervous, sensory, and endocrine systems
Communication and Integration organ systems (detect external stimuli and coordinate the body's responses)
Integumentary and immune systems
Defense organ systems
Control Center
Determine the appropriate source of action (also called the integrator)
Positive Feedback Loop
Feedback loop that moves a variable farther away from set point to amplify the result (childbirth, ripening fruit)
Negative Feedback Loop
Feedback loop that returns changing conditions back to a set point by discouraging the detected stimulus; homeostatic mechanisms use this
Endocrine System
Glands secrete hormones that regulate processes such as growth, reproduction, and nutrient use through the blood (slow, long-lasting chemical signals)
Tissues
Groups of cells that are similar in structure and function
Evaporation
Heat transfer through the phase change of water from liquid to gas
Hibernation
Long-term torpor that is an adaptation to winter cold and food scarcity
Evaporative Heat Loss
Mechanism of thermoregulation by which sweat glands in the skin allow water to be transported to the surface, where it then evaporates, taking large quantities of heat with it.
Thermogenesis
Mechanism of thermoregulation in which an animal moves to generate heat (shivering)
Insulation
Mechanism of thermoregulation that reduces the heat flow between an animal and its environment
Circulatory Adaptations
Mechanism of thermoregulation that regulates blood flow near the body surface
Effector
Muscles, organs, or other structures that receive signals from the control center. When it receives a signal, it changes its function to correct the deviation
Thermoregulation
Process of maintaining an internal temperature within a tolerable range
Digestive, circulatory, respiratory, and urinary systems
Regulation and Maintenance organ systems
Excretion
Removal of nitrogen-containing waste products
Reproductive system
Reproduction organ system
Dynamic Equilibrium
Set points; when something is in homeostasis
Torpor
State in which activity and metabolism are low (hibernation, estivation)
Estivation
Summer torpor. Enables animals to survive long periods of high temperatures and scarce water supplies
Muscular and Skeletal System
Support and Movement organ systems
Homeostasis
The ability of an organism to maintain an internal balance despite changing environmental conditions or stimuli
Nervous System
The body's speedy, electrochemical communication network, consisting of all the nerve cells of the peripheral and central nervous systems; neurons transmit information between specific locations (fast signaling)
Conduction
The direct transfer of heat from one substance to another substance that it is touching
Standard Metabolic Rate
The metabolic rate of an ectotherm at rest at a specific temperature
Homeostatic Mechanism
The process by which an organism monitors and maintains a constant state
Basal Metabolic Rate
The rate at which an endotherm uses energy at rest at a comfortable temperature
Osmoregulation
The regulation of the gain and loss of water
Bioenergetics
The study of how organisms manage their energy resources; overall flow and transfer of energy in an animal
Anatomy
The study of the biological form of an organism
Physiology
The study of the biological functions an organism performs
Convection
The transfer of thermal energy by the circulation or movement of a liquid or gas
digestive, body, skin
The vertebrate body plan: tube within a tube. Inner tube = ______ tract, outer tube = main _______, outermost tube = ______ and its accessories
Germ Layers
Three main layers that form the various tissues and organs of an animal body; ectoderm, mesoderm, endoderm
Connective
Tissue that binds and supports other tissues (cartilage, tendons, ligaments, bone, blood, adipose)
Muscle
Tissue that controls body movement (skeletal, smooth, cardiac)
Epithelial
Tissue that covers the outside of the body and lines the organs and cavities within the body
Nervous
Tissue that senses stimuli and transmits signals through the animal (neurons, glia)
Radiation
Transfer of heat by electromagnetic waves