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Transport in animals

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UNIT 9: TRANSPORT IN ANIMALS


Circulatory systems

 A system of blood vessels with a pump and valves to ensure one-way flow
 Oxygenated blood: blood containing lots of oxygen. In human, blood becomes
oxygenated in lung
 Deoxygenated blood: blood containing only a little oxygen
 Unlike other arteries and veins, pulmonary arteries carry away deoxygenated
blood, pulmonary veins carry oxygenated blood

Pulmonary circuit: transports blood to the lungs. The blood is oxygenated there
and then carried back to the heart. Gaseous exchange happens in the lungs

Systemic circuit: transports blood around the body, it transports O 2 and nutrients
to the body tissues and carries away deoxygenated blood containing CO 2 and other




waste materials

Double circulation: Blood is returned to heart after it has become oxygenated.
The heart then pumps it at high pressure to the rest of the body

 Able to supply O2 more quickly to respiring body cells, which allows metabolic
rate to be faster
 Give tissues and muscles blood full of O 2 instead of a mixture of oxygenated
and deoxygenated blood

, UNIT 9: TRANSPORT IN ANIMALS


Single circulation: Blood moves directly from the oxygenating organs (gills, lungs)
to the rest of the body
at a relatively
low pressure

 Walls of
ventricles
are thicker
than atria
because
atria just
receive
blood; the actual
task of pumping
it out of the heart is done by ventricles
 Left ventricle’s walls are thicker because right ventricle pumps the blood to
lungs, which are closer. Left ventricle transports blood all over body
 Blood is pumped away from the heart into arteries and returns to the heart in
veins
 Septum separates oxygenated and deoxygenated blood
How heart pumps blood


Transport high pressure blood away from heart
Oxygenated blood
Thick, elastic, muscular walls
 Withstand the pulsing as blood is pumped

Allow substances to diffuse into cells
Oxygenated and deoxygenated blood
One-cell thick, narrow wall
 allow diffusion happen quicker; bring blood into
close contact with body tissue
Very low blood pressure
Transport low pressure blood to the heart
Deoxygenated blood
Thin, less elastic walls (most of blood pressure has
been lost)
Have valves
 Valves prevent backwards flow
Less resistance to blood flow

Coronary heart disease (CHD)

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