CONTENT
·
Transport
system
·
Need
for transport system
·
Relating
transport in lower organism to that in higher organism
·
Transport
material in animals and plant
·
Diverse
mechanism of transportation in some organisms
·
Transport
system in mammals (man)
·
Functions
of blood
Transport system
Transport system is the movement of metabolic materials from various parts of an organism where they are produced and transported to other parts where such are used, stored or removed from the body.
Need For Transport System
- All living organisms (plants and animals) need transport system for the following reasons
- To obtain essential materials such as oxygen, water and nutrients.
- To remove metabolic waste such as carbon dioxide, urea, water, etc.
- For moving water and mineral salts from the soil through the roots to the various parts of plant.
- For transfer of hormones from production site to site of action.
- For transfer of glucose to various parts of plants.
RELATING TRANSPORT IN LOWER ORGANISMS TO THAT IN
HIGHER ORGANISM
|
Transport in Lower Organisms |
Transport in Higher Organisms |
1 |
Substances are
moved over small distance |
Substances are moved over greater distance |
2 |
Transport is by
simple diffusion |
Transport
involves diffusion and other means. |
3 |
Diffusion is
enough because the surface area to volume ratio (A/V) is great |
Effusion
transport system is necessary because surface area to volume ratio (A/V) is
too small |
4 |
Cells are not
isolated |
Isolated group
of cells need to be connected |
5 |
Transport
materials are small in quantity. |
Transport
materials are large in quantity. |
Transport Materials In Animals
|
Materials Transported |
Source |
Destination |
1 |
Oxygen |
Lungs |
All living
cells of the body |
2 |
Carbon dioxide |
Body cells |
Lungs |
3 |
Urea |
Body cells |
Liver |
4 |
Excess salts |
Body cells |
Skin and kidney |
5 |
Water |
Body cell |
Skin, lungs,
liver, kidney etc |
6 |
Amino acid |
Small intestine |
Body cells |
7 |
Vitamins |
Small intestine |
Body cells |
8 |
Sugar |
Body cells |
Body cells |
9 |
Fatty acid and
glycerol |
Small intestine
|
Body cells |
10 |
Mineral salt |
Small intestine |
Body cells |
11 |
Hormones |
Endocrine
glands |
Target organs
of tissue |
12 |
Antibodies |
White blood
cells |
All body parts |
Transport Materials in Plants
|
Other materials transported in plants are:
1. Oxygen 2.nitrogen waste products (latex) 3. amino acids 4. glucose 5. lipids 6. auxins (hormones) 7.mineral salts
Transport Media
Liquid or fluid is usually the medium of
transportation of minerals. Generally speaking, the four major media of
transportation in organisms are:
Cytoplasm:
Used in lower unicellular organisms such as amoeba, chlamydomonas, euglena,
etc.
Cell
sap/ Latex: A concentrated solution in the cell vacuole of
plants.
Blood: Used
in most animals, especially vertebrates for conveyance of essential materials
like oxygen, digested food, etc.
Lymph: Found in higher animals. Lymph is a fluid with extra lymphocytes (W.B.C with no red blood cells present). It returns its fluid to the main vein through opening in the subclavian (left jugular) vein below the neck.Lacteal is a lymphatic vessel transporting fatty acids and glycerol. The lymph movement is enhanced by muscular action. It moves through lymph vessel. Some swellings exist in the gut along the lymphatic vessel, especially in the neck, groin and armpit called lymph nodes. These are where lymph passes through to be purified before entering into the blood stream. Unlike the circulatory system, the lymphatic system ends blindly
Diverse Mechanisms of Transportation in Some Organisms
Unicellular Organisms
Materials are transported through the continuous streaming movements. The streaming could be along the direction of movement of the organism, back to front (e.g. Amoeba) or in circular motion (e.g. Paramecium)
Multicellular Organism
1.
Hydra
The movement of the gut wall draws water into
the gut and causes digested food and oxygen within it to circulate. Thus the
cell lining the gut absorbs the materials. The whopping movement of the
flagella of flagellated cells also helps in material circulation in the gut.
2. Flatworms
The
large body surface area to volume ratio and extensive branching gut throughout
the body makes the food and oxygen to diffuse into all the body cells. Movement
of the body wall assists to transport waste products out of the body.
3. Insects
and mollusks
Both have open circulatory system i.e. the heart pumps blood out into a blood vessel with branches open into spaces in the body cavity known as Haemocoels. Blood from these spaces eventually flows into the vessels leading into the heart. Blood flows in unidirectional and blood distribution is poorly controlled.
TRANSPORT
SYSTEM IN MAMMALS (MAN)
The media of transportation in man include the blood and lymph.
COMPOSTION AND STRUCTURE OF BLOOD
The blood is a tissue in a fluid form. It is about 5-6
liters in the body. Blood is made of two major components.The blood cells (corpuscles); which are solid.The plasma which; is liquid.
BLOOD CELLS
- There are three types
- Red blood cells (erythrocyte)
- White blood cells (leucocytes)
v Blood platelets (thrombocytes)
Blood Cells |
Description |
Function |
RBC |
1.
Small, round and disc-like in shape 2.
Has no nucleus. 3.
One cubic liter of blood has about
5.5million of red blood cells. 4.
Has a life span about 120 days |
Helps to
transport oxygen from lungs to the body cells through its pigment
(haemoglobin). Haemoglobin combines readily with oxygen to form oxyhaemoglobin
in the lungs |
WBC |
1.
Irregular (i.e. amoeboid in shaped) 2.
Relatively large and colourless (larger than
RBC but fewer) 3.
Contain nucleus- about 5,000-10,000 per pin
head of blood (cubic milliliter of blood) |
Help to defend
the body against diseases by engulfing and intruding pathogens (bacteria and
virus) or by secreting antibodies. |
RBC- Red Blood Cell WBC- White Blood
Cell
White blood cells areof two types;
Phagocytes- found in lymphatic system which ingest bacteria,
viruses and dead cells to prevent diseases in a process called phagocytosis.
Lymphocytes- made in lymph glands and they produce antibodies
i.e. chemicals which stick to the surface of germs to kill them.
Blood cell |
Description |
Function |
Platelets |
1.
Tiny, Irregular all fragments 2.
Have no nucleus 3. Fewer in number
and smaller in size than RBC. 4. About 250,000 – 400,000 per cubic ml of
blood. 5. Produced in red
bone marrow. |
Aids in blood clotting |
Blood plasma (transport liquid) |
1.
Liquid component of blood 2.
A pale yellow liquid made up mainly of water
(about 90% water) together with other dissolved substances like plasma
proteins antibodies, hormones, enzymes, gases, digested food, salts and other
waste products |
Transport the
dissolved substances and the blood cells. |
Lymph |
1.
A colourless liquid in lymphatic system that
has similar composition to the tissue fluid but contains extra lymphocytes. 2.
Has no red cell |
·
Body defense by producing white blood cells.
Disease causing micro organisms found in the lymph are pushed out in the
lymph node and engulfed by phagocytes. ·
Absorption of fatty acid and glycerol |
FUNCTIONS OF BLOOD
1.
Oxygen
is transported through hemoglobin.
2.
Temperature
regulation by evenly distributing heat produced in the liver and the muscles
throughout the body.
3.
Transportation
of digested food (glucose, amino acid, fatty acids and glycerol) from the villi
to all body cells and tissues for use or storage.
4.
Transportation
of excretory products (C02, water, urea) from site of production to excretory
organs like skin, lungs, liver and kidney for removal
5.
Transfer
of hormones from production site to target organs.
6.
Transportation
of water (90% of the blood content) to various cells for metabolic activities.
7.
Defense
against infection through the action of WBC
8.
Blood
clotting initiated by the platelets when injury is sustained
9.
Production
of anti bodies by the WBC for destroying pathogens and their harmful product.
- State the media for transportation in ten organisms.
- Compare the transport mechanism of a named unicellular organism to that of a named multi-cellular organism
- What feature distinguishes lymph from blood plasma?
- State five functions of blood.
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