Tissues
Compare and Contrast
Homeostasis
Diet & Nutrition
Digestive System
100

The four main types of tissues are:

Epithelial, Connective, Muscle and Nervous

100

What is the difference between anatomy and physiology?

Anatomy is the study of the biological form of an organism while physiology is the study of the biological functions an organism performs.

100

Define homeostasis

The mechanism through which some organisms maintain a “steady state” or internal balance regardless of the external environment

100

What is the difference between an essential nutrient and non-essential nutrient?

essential nutrients must be obtained from food/diet. Non-essential nutrients can be created in the body.

100

What is the name for smooth muscle contractions that push food through the digestive tract?

Peristalsis

200

Interstitial fluid is...

the liquid content that fills the spaces between cells, allows for the movement of material into/out of cells.

200

Compare and contrast the relationship between an animal's body mass and surface area. 

The larger an organism gets, the less surface area it has compared its mass --> Smaller animals have a closer surface area to volume ratio. 

200

What role does a stimulus play in homeostasis?

A stimulus triggers a response from the regulatory mechanisms

200

Name the four primary essential nutrients

Essential amino acids, essential fatty acids, vitamins, minerals... (carbohydrates and water okay...)

200

Name the four stages of food processing, in order

1. ingestion

2. digestion

3. absorption

4. elimination

300

Smooth muscle tissue is responsible for...

Involuntary body activities.

300

Compare and contrast a regulator vs a conformer

A regulator maintains a stable internal environment regardless or internal conditions.

A conformer allows its internal condition to vary with external changes 

300

Name 3 internal levels that humans regulate via homeostasis

Body temperature, blood pH, and glucose concentration 

300

What is it called when cows eat mud? What dietary deficiency are they resolving?

Geophagy; malnutrition

300

What is a cecum? Where is it found in the GI tract? What does it do? Is it bigger in a carnivore or herbivore?

Storage organ for food to help with plant matter fermentation by microorganisms. It connects the small and large intestine. Bigger in herbivore

400

The role of fibroplasts (found in connective tissue) is...

to secrete the proteins of extracellular fibers

400

What is the difference between the role of neurons vs glial cells?

Neurons are cells that transmit nerve impulses while glial cells are the cells that nourish, insulate and replenish the neurons. 

400

How does a set point help an organism maintain homeostasis?

Fluctuations above or below the set point trigger a response to help return internal levels to the set point.

400

Distinguish between undernourishment, malnourishment, and overnourishment

under: diet doesn't provide enough energy.. not eating enough

Mal: long-term absence of one or more essential nutrients

Over: excessive nutrition (overweight) 

400

What is the one nutrient type that goes directly from the intestine to cells, by-passing the liver? What vessel takes this nutrient up?

Fats; lacteal takes it up (type of lymphatic vessel)

500
What does adipose tissue do?

To stores fat for insulation and fuel 

500

Contrast loose connective tissue vs fibrous connective tissue.

Loose connective tissue binds epithelia to underlying tissues and holds organs in place.

Fibrous connective tissue is found in tendons, which attach muscles to bones, and ligaments, which connect bones at joints.

500
Briefly explain homeostasis using the terms stimulus, receptor, integrator, and effector. 

A stimulus is detected by a receptor. Changes are interpreted by an integrator that sets the appropriate effector in motion. The effector then returns the body levels to normal. 

500

Name the four of the five food processing strategies and give an example of each

Suspension (whales, flamingo, clam)

Substrate (leaf miner caterpillar, earthworm)

Bulk (snake, humans, alligator)

Fluid (nectar-feeding hummingbirds/bats, mosquitos, aphids)

Deposit (crabs) 

500

1. _____ and _____ are secreted into gastric lumen (stomach)

2. ______ cleaves ______ to produce _____

3. _______ catalyzes conversion of _____ to make more of itself

1. pepsinogen and HCl are secreted into gastric lumen

2. HCl cleaves pepsinogen to produce pepsin

3. Pepsin catalyzes conversion of pepsinogen to make more of itself 

M
e
n
u