ss2 Second Term Note Edited
ss2 Second Term Note Edited
ss2 Second Term Note Edited
Mouth
The alimentary canal of man starts from the mouth.
Food is ingested in the mouth. The mouth contains the
teeth, salivary gland and tongue.
Oesophagus or Gullet
It connects the mouth to the stomach. The wall of the
oesophagus is muscular. Bands of muscles contract and
relax alternately to push each bolus of food downwards
slowly. This process is known as peristalsis.
Stomach
Food enters the stomach when the ring of muscles or
pyloric sphincter at the entrance of the stomach relaxes.
The muscular walls of the stomach contract and relax
forcefully, thus churning the food. Small pieces of food
are broken down even more and gastric juice is mixed
into the food. In the stomach, the gastric gland secretes
gastric juice which contains two enzymes pepsin and
renin which are very important as well as dilute
hydrochloric acid. They are produced by special cells
lining the wall of the stomach. Pepsin is a protease; it
digests proteins to polypeptides, which are intermediate
products of protein digestion. Pepsin works best in an
acidic medium. The dilute hydrochloric acid (HCl) is
secreted by the gastric gland. HCl creates an acid
medium for two enzymes to act. HCl also help to kill
some bacteria in the stomach.
Duodenum
Duodenum is the first part of the intestine. The middle
and last sections of the small intestine are the jejunum
and ileum respectively. Several substances are secreted
into the duodenum. The pancreas secretes pancreatic
juice, a watery alkaline liquid containing several
digestive enzymes. The liver produces bile which is
stored in the gall bladder. Bile is a greenish alkaline
liquid which does not contain digestive enzymes. When
chyme enters the duodenum, certain hormones
stimulate the pancreas andgall bladder to send their
digestive juices to the duodenum. The duodenum
contains pancreas which secretes pancreatic juice that
contain three enzymes:
Small intestine
Small intestine is found between the duodenum and the
large intestine. Two major events take place in the small
intestine. These events are
a. Digestion
b. Absorption of the digested food.
Digestion: Digestion of food also takes place in the
small intestine or ileum.
Similarities
BIRD GRASSHOPPER
i. There is presence of Tongue, duodenum and
tongue, duodenum, and pancreas is absent
pancreas.
ii. Mouth is modified into Mouth is modified into
beak mandible and maxillae for
Chewing and grinding.
iii. It has a long alimentary It has relatively short
canal alimentary canal
iv. The hind gut ends in Hind gut ends in anus
cloaca distinct from the reproductive
tract
v. Malphigian tubule are Malphigian tubules are
absent attached to the alimentary
canal.
2. FLUID FEEDERS
Animals which feed on any fluid materials are classified
as fluid feeders. There are two major groups of fluid
feeders. These are:
3. INSECT FEEDERS
Feeding in hydra
Hydra feeds mainly on small crustaceans or other
smaller aquatic organisms. The food is captured by the
actions of nematocysts borne on the tentacle. The food
is carried into the wide mouth by the tentacles.
Enzymes are secreted into the enteron by the gland
cells. Here digestion takes place intracellularly i.e.
inside the body cells. The digested food is absorbed into
the body while the undigested parts are sent back into
the enteron and forced out through the mouth.
TRANSPORT SYSTEMS
The transfer of organic food and inorganic substances
from one part of the body to another in a living
organism is known as the transportation or
translocation. To transport these substances, every
living organism is equipped with a special transport
system.
Location
TRANSPO FROM TO FINAL
RTED USE/FATE
MATERIA
L
1. Oxygen Lungs Living cells Respiration
2. Water Cells Kidney, skin Excretion
and lungs
3. Carbon (iv) Living cells Lungs, gills, Excretion
oxide trachea
4. Nitrogenous Living cells Liver, kidney Excretion
waste
products
5. Amino acids Gut or small Living cells Growth and
intestine repair
6. Excess salts Cells Skin and kidney Excretion
7. Vitamins Small intestine Cells Digestion
8. Glucose Gut or ileum Living cells Respiration
9. Lipids Gut Living cells Respiration
10. Hormones Endocrine Organs or tissue
glands
11 Antibodies White blood All part of the
cells body
MEDIA OF TRANSPORTATION
Materials move round the body of organisms carried in
fluid media i.e. a liquid or fluid is the medium of
transportation of materials. There are four major media
of transportation:
COMPOSITION OF BLOOD
Mammalian blood comprises of four main components:
Red blood cells (Erythrocytes).
White blood cells (Leucocytes).
Platelets (Thrombocytes)
Plasma.
Function:
The haemoglobin (pigment) in the red blood cells helps
to transport oxygen from the lungs to the body cells.
Functions of WBC
1. Lymphocytes produce chemicals called antibodies
which stick to the surface of germs and kill them.
PLATELETS (THROMBOCYTES)
Blood vessels
They are the tubes within the body through which the
blood flows away or to the heart. They are
i. Arteries
ii. Veins and
iii. Capillaries
Arteries
ii. They carry blood away from the heart to the body.
iii. They have elastic and thick muscular walls with
small lumen (canal) to withstand high blood
pressure coming from the heart
Veins
They carry blood to the heart from the body. They have
thin and non-elastic muscular walls with large lumen.
Capillaries
They are tiny blood vessels joining the arteries to the
veins. They are found at the junction between arteries
and veins around tissues and organs of the body. They
have tiny, thin walls. Arteries divide and become
smaller to form arterioles as they leave the heart. At the
same time, the smaller veins from capillaries which join
to form bigger veins called venules.
DIRECTION OF BLOOD FLOW IN THE BODY
(May be drawn)
ARTERY VEIN
Blood in it is pink or
6. bright red in colour Blood is dark-red in colour.
Blood flows at high
7. pressure Blood flows at low pressure
It is deeply situated in
8. the muscles It is superficially located
It has valve
HEART
The heart is the pumping station of the circulatory
system. It is muscular and the most powerful organ
responsible for the pumping of blood round the body.
The heart is found behind the breast bone (sternum) and
in between the two lobes of lungs within the chest or
thoracic cavity. Heart beat means each pumping action
of the heart. Man has an average of 72 heartbeats per
minute when at rest.
Heart is reddish in colour and made-up of special
muscles called the cardiac muscles. Covering the heart
is a tough bag, the pericardium. The space between the
two layers is filled with pericardial fluid which reduces
the friction caused by the pumping movements of the
heart.
MECHANISM OF TRANSPORTATION IN
UNICELLULAR/LOWER ORGANISM
In unicellular organism, the surface area to volume ratio
(SA\V) of the body is large and as such the materials
such as food, oxygen, water, carbondioxide, etc are
transported from one part of the body to another by
diffusion. Examples are found in amoeba, paramecium,
hydra and flatworms. In amoeba, the cytoplasm rotates
from the back to the front along the direction of its
movement as it changes its shapes. In hydra, the
movement of the gut wall draws water into the gut and
cause digested food and other materials to circulate
within the circulate and allow the cells lining of the gut
to absorb the materials. Some cells possesflagellae and
enhance the circulation of materials in the gut.
Insects and molluscsposses open circulatory system for
transportation of materials within the body. The heart
pumps blood into a blood vessel with branches opening
into all the body cavity called haemocoels. The
materials are exchanged between the body cells and the
blood and the blood in the spaces eventually flows into
the vessels leading to the heart in one direction through
the valves. In this system of the organisms (insects and
molluscs), the distribution of blood to the body parts is
poorly controlled.
MECHANISM OF TRANSPORTATION /
TRANSLOCATION IN HIGHER PLANTS.
Plants need sufficient quantities of many materials
which are transported in them. In aquatic, unicellular
and simple, multicellular plants, gas enter and leave
their cells by diffusion. Water enters the cells of these
plants by osmosis, while manufactured foods and
wastes are transported by diffusion.
1.Phloem tissues
The phloem tissue consists of thin-walled, living cells,
with dense cytoplasm which have perforated cross-
walls. It conducts manufactured foods from the leaves
and storage organs to the other parts of the plant.
TRANSLOCATION
It is the process by which manufactured food substances
are transported from where they are manufactured to the
tissues where they are needed or stored through the
phloem vessels/tissues.
RESPIRATORY SYSTEMS
Respiration can be defined as the oxidation of food to
release energy for use by living organisms for various
life activities. Respiratory system involves the
exchange of gases i.e. oxygen and
carbondioxidebetween organisms and its environment
using specialized organs called respiratory organs.
STAGES OF RESPIRATION
Transport medium
RESPIRATORY
ORGANISM STRUCTURE/ORGAN
Flowering plants
xi. (maize, plant) Stomata and lenticels
Toad
MAMMALS
d. Expiration or exhalation
GASEOUS EXCHANGE
Carbondioxide 0.003% 4%
a. Photosynthesis and
b. Respiration
The differences between the process of photosynthesis
and respiration are highlighted below:
Photosynthesis Respiration
1. It occurs in It is carried out by a
green plants plant cells
2. It occurs during the It occurs at all times.
day (in sunlight)
3. It is a fast and It is slow due to
vigorous process inactive nature of
plants.
4. Carbondioxide is Oxygen is taken in and
taken in and Oxygen Carbondioxide is given
out
is given out
5. Photosynthesis Respiration releases
absorbs solar energy energy as ATP
6. It involves the It involves break down
production of of food to release
organic food energy
(glucose)
Stems – lenticels
Stomata
Lenticels
They are tiny pores or air slits found as scars on the stems
and roots that exhibit secondary thickening. A lenticel
consists of a loose mass of small thin-walled cells which
permits easy diffusion of gases in and out of the stem. As
the cortices increase in number and size, the epidermis
ruptures to form an opening (lenticels) for gaseous
exchange
Diagram of the structure of a lenticel
Root hairs
EXCRETORY SYSTEM
IMPORTANCE OF EXCRETION
1. Excretion helps to remove poisonous/ toxic or
unwanted substances.
EXCRETION IN MAMMALS
URINARY TUBULE
MECHANISM OF EXCRETION IN MAMMALS
(URINE FORMATION)
Ultra filtration
Selective re-absorption
Hormonal secretion