Adaptation to Aquatic and Terrestrial Environments


Claude Bernard’s "Milieu Intérieur"

  1. passive transport—solutes move down their concentration gradient; does not require expenditure of energy
  2. active transport—solutes move up their concentration gradient; requires expenditure of energy (from ATP)

 

A. Salt Balance and Water Balance

  1. kidney—produces copious amounts of dilute urine to eliminate excess water or produces small amounts of concentrated urine to eliminate solutes
  2. gut—ingestion of water or solutes (e.g., salty foods) in part determined by "appetites" (physiological responses to changing ECF composition)

Salinity Relations of Aquatic Organisms

 

B. Nitrogen Excretion

  1. building blocks for growth and reproduction
  2. a source of energy—liberated by respiration

Adapted from a page from BIO 203 at State University of New York at Geneseo on April 14, 1998.

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