Key vocab
Environmental Osmosis
Nephron Structure
Kidney Processes
Hormonal Regulation
100

The term describes the total concentration of dissolved solutes in a solution.

What is osmolarity?

100

This type of environment has a higher solute concentration than an organism’s body fluids.

What is a hypertonic environment?

100

This structure is the functional unit of the kidney responsible for filtering blood and forming urine.
 

What is the nephron?

100

This process moves plasma from blood into the nephron.

What is filtration?

100

This hormone is released from the posterior pituitary and regulates water reabsorption in the kidney.

What is antidiuretic hormone (ADH)?

200

This biological concept refers to maintaining stable internal conditions despite environmental changes.

What is homeostasis?

200

In a hypertonic environment, water tends to move in this direction relative to the organism.

What is out of the organism?

200

This structure performs the initial filtration of blood in the nephron.

What is the glomerulus?

200

This process moves substances from the nephron back into the bloodstream.

What is reabsorption?

200

ADH primarily acts on this nephron structure.

What is the collecting duct?

300

Animals that maintain constant internal osmolarity even when the environment changes are called this.

What are osmoregulators?

300

This type of environment has a lower solute concentration than an organism’s body fluids.

What is a hypotonic environment?

300

This nephron structure reabsorbs a large portion of glucose, salts, and water.

What is the proximal convoluted tubule (PCT)?

300

This process moves substances from blood into the nephron to be eliminated.

What is secretion?

300

ADH increases this kidney process by inserting water channels into tubule membranes.

What is water reabsorption?

400

Animals that allow their internal osmolarity to match the surrounding environment are called this.

What are osmoconformers?

400

In a hypotonic environment, water tends to move in this direction relative to the organism.

What is into the organism?

400

This part of the Loop of Henle is permeable to water.

What is the descending limb of the Loop of Henle?

400

These specialized blood vessels run alongside the Loop of Henle and help maintain concentration gradients.

What are the vasa recta?

400

When ADH levels are high, urine becomes this.

What is more concentrated?

500

This type of membrane transport is required by osmoregulators to move salts against concentration gradients.

What is active transport?

500

Freshwater fish maintain osmotic balance by producing this type of urine.

What is large amounts of dilute urine?

500

This part of the Loop of Henle primarily transports salt out of the tubule.

What is the ascending limb of the Loop of Henle?

500

This mechanism helps maintain the kidney’s osmotic gradient to concentrate urine.

What is countercurrent exchange?

500

ADH has this effect on urine volume.

What is decreasing urine volume?

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