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Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

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Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management. Excretion and Waste Management. What would happen if you never threw out your garbage or leftover food ? Be as detailed and exact as possible Specific to your house and family Why do we sweat? Why do we urinate?. Waste Removal. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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UNIT 4: EXCRETION AND WASTE MANAGEMENT
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Page 1: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

UNIT 4: EXCRETION AND WASTE MANAGEMENT

Page 2: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

Excretion and Waste Management What would happen if you never threw

out your garbage or leftover food? Be as detailed and exact as possible Specific to your house and family

Why do we sweat?

Why do we urinate?

Page 3: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

Waste Removal One of the 7 life processes = removal

of waste products produced by the cells of our bodies

What are the waste products in the human body? Brainstorm on a piece of paper Compile your ideas into the following table

on chart paper:Waste Product Origin Organ of Excretion

Page 4: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

Waste ProductsWaste

Product Origin Organ of Excretion

Ammonia Breakdown of amino acids in the liver Kidney

Urea Conversion of ammonia in the liver Kidney

CO2 Cellular respiration LungsWater Cellular respiration Kidneys

Mineral Salts Food and water Kidneys

Lactic Acid

Anaerobic cellular respiration Liver

Page 5: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

Liver

Kidney

Page 6: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

Excretory System Why is feces not included in the list of

metabolic wastes? Feces is not a product of cellular metabolism.

It is a “leftover” after the body absorbs what nutrients it needs from the intestines

Brainstorm: the relationships between the excretory system and the respiratory system, and the digestive system.

How might the excretory system be involved in homeostasis?

Page 7: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

Waste Products: Cellular Respiration

We obtain energy by converting complex organic compounds into simpler compounds. BUT some of these simpler compounds can be harmful

Carbon Dioxide Humans produce an average of 1kg per day! If levels become too high = our blood becomes acidic

Leads to breakdown of enzymes, etc… Most is converted to bicarbonate ions (less harmful): HCO3-

Lactic Acid Converted to pyruvate (aerobic respiration) OR removed through conversion to glucose

Water

Page 8: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

Cellular Respiration

Waste Products

Page 9: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management
Page 10: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

Waste Products: Metabolism The large intestine removes toxic waste

from the digestive system. The liver transforms these ingested

toxins into soluble compounds that can be eliminated by the kidneys Alcohol, heavy metals (Fe, Al, Hg)

The liver also transforms the hazardous products of protein breakdown to be eliminated by the kidneys

Page 11: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

Waste Products: MetabolismWhy are proteins so harmful? Fact: The average Canadian consumes more

protein than is required to maintain tissues and promote cell growth.

Excess protein is often converted into carbohydrates

BUT proteins, unlike carbohydrates, contain nitrogen.

When amino acids (the protein building blocks) are broken down we get the by-product: ammonia

Page 12: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

Ammonia Deamination = the breakdown of amino acids

occurs in the liver. byproduct = ammonia (NH3)

BUT ammonia is extremely toxic - a buildup of as little as 0.005 mg is lethal!

In the liver, two molecules of ammonia combine with another waste product, CO2, to form urea

Page 13: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management
Page 14: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

3 Hydrogen atoms (H+) that can be donated to

increase acidity

This acidity makes it a useful agent for

household cleaners

Page 15: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management
Page 16: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

Urea Urea is 100 000 times less toxic than ammonia.

The blood can dissolve 33 mg of urea per 100 mL of blood.

Page 17: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

Excretion: Simple Organisms For ALL organisms, getting wastes out of the

cell is just as important as bringing in nutrients Otherwise toxins would build up and the cell

would soon die In unicellular organisms and in primitive

multicellular organisms (e.g. a sponge) every cell is in direct contact with the external environment Therefore, wastes are released directly from the

cell and water currents carry the waste away

Page 18: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

Excretion: Simple Organisms BUT, unicellular

organisms must regulate their internal fluids More dissolved solutes

then their freshwater surroundings

Therefore, these cells should draw in water, expand, and eventually burst

Fluid Regulation: a contractile vacuole expels excess water, preventing this swelling

Page 19: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management
Page 20: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

Excretion: Complex Organisms Complex multicellular organisms are faced with

the same problem but on a much bigger scale. Not every cell is in direct contact with the

external environment Therefore, wastes must be collected and

temporarily stored A secondary problem: our cells are so

specialized that not every cell is designed to remove wastes Wastes must be transported to cells that are

capable of excretion

Page 21: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

The earthworm uses a series of tubules to remove wastes from the blood and body cavity. Cells lined with cilia surround a funnel-like structure (the nephrostome) and draw fluids from the body cavity into tiny tubules. The wastes are stored as urine and are released through small pores (nephridiopores) along the body wall.

Page 22: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

Malpighian tubules that run throughout the body cavity of an insect absorb wastes by diffusion. Wastes are released into the gut and eliminated with solid wastes from the anus.

Page 23: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management
Page 24: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

Human Excretory System Major structures:

Kidneys Liver Large Intestine Lungs Skin

Page 25: Unit 4: Excretion and Waste Management

Excretory System StructuresClass Activity1. Structure (how is it built, where is it in the body)

Include a simple diagram2. Role (in terms of waste removal)3. One way in which it is related to one of the

other structures in the excretory system4. One way in which it is related to digestive,

respiratory, and circulatory system5. How it helps to maintain homeostasis (include

one feedback loop/process)


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