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Biology Section 11
- Single circuit heart is found in fishes.
- Stomata open due to active transport of K+ into the guard cells from the surrounding epidermis.
- Hearts of earthworms are present lateral to the oesophagus.
- Plasma constitutes about 55% by volume of blood in a normal person.
- Brown fat in certain mammals is specialized in rapid heat production.
- Panting is a representative of evaporative cooling.
- Formation of heat shock proteins in plants prevents denaturation of enzymes and other proteins.
- Fishes, most invertebrates, and amphibians are examples of ectothermic animals.
- The mechanism of regulation of solutes and water gain/loss between an organism and its environment is osmoregulation.
- Hydrophytes increase transpiration by increasing the surface area of leaves for osmoregulation.
- Most marine invertebrates are osmoconformers.
- Bony fishes are considered direct descendants of freshwater ancestors.
- Oxygen (O2) is produced in plants during autotrophic mode of life.
- Conifers excrete some waste materials directly into soil, occasionally using them as a chemical weapon against competing plants.
- Purine and pyrimidine metabolism results in the production of xanthine.
- About 50 ml of water is required to excrete 1gN of Urea.
- Each nephridium of earthworm opens to the exterior through a nephridiopore.
- Urea is the main nitrogenous waste formed in the body of an earthworm.
- Malpighian tubules are associated with the gut of the organism.
- Juxtramedullary nephrons play an important role in the production of concentrated urine.
- Calcium oxalate kidney stones are the most common.
- Hemodialysis is the first treatment administered to a newly diagnosed renal failure patient.
- O2 is a waste product produced in plants during both photosynthesis and respiration.
- Excess nitrogen in animals is primarily excreted in the form of ammonia.
- Hydra has no specialized excretory system as its whole body cells are in contact with water.
- The distal blind end of the malpighian tubules bathes freely in the haemocoel.
- Metanephridium is a sentimentally arranged excretory system.
- Liver converts excessive lactic acid into glycogen.
- Each human kidney receives 20% of the total cardiac output.
- Posterior pituitary hormones act predominantly on the collecting tubules.
- Heterotherms are animals that produce metabolic heat at a low level and also absorb heat from the surroundings.
- Blubber, a thick layer of fat, is present in marine mammals.
- Production of pyrogens is a protective phenomenon.
- The hypothalamus contains the thermostat of the human body.
- Leaves in the plant’s body are called excretophores.
- Anhydrobiosis enables animals to tolerate dehydration.
- Freshwater fishes excrete large volumes of diluted urine.
- Rose is an example of mesophytes.
- Negative feedback maintains internal temperature lower than the external temperature.
- Marine fish can keep their internal environment hypertonic by retaining trimethylamine oxide.
- Kangaroo rats survive without drinking water due to anhydrobiotic adaptation.
- Aquatic animals mainly excrete nitrogenous waste in the form of ammonia.
- Protonephridia are present in flatworms.
- Ammonia is the main nitrogenous waste formed in the body of earthworms.
- Malpighian tubules are associated with the gut of the organism.
- Juxtramedullary nephrons play an important role in the production of concentrated urine.
- Calcium oxalate kidney stones are the most common.
- Hemodialysis is the first treatment administered to a newly diagnosed renal failure patient.
- O2 is a waste product produced in plants during both photosynthesis and respiration.
- Excess nitrogen in animals is primarily excreted in the form of ammonia.
- Hydra has no specialized excretory system as its whole body cells are in contact with water.
- The distal blind end of the malpighian tubules bathes freely in the haemocoel.
- Metanephridium is a sentimentally arranged excretory system.
- Liver converts excessive lactic acid into glycogen.
- Each human kidney receives 20% of the total cardiac output.
- Posterior pituitary hormones act predominantly on the collecting tubules.
- Heterotherms are animals that produce metabolic heat at a low level and also absorb heat from the surroundings.
- Blubber, a thick layer of fat, is present in marine mammals.
- Production of pyrogens is a protective phenomenon.
- The hypothalamus contains the thermostat of the human body.
- Leaves in the plant’s body are called excretophores.
- Anhydrobiosis enables animals to tolerate dehydration.
- Freshwater fishes excrete large volumes of diluted urine.
- Rose is an example of mesophytes.
- Negative feedback maintains internal temperature lower than the external temperature.
- Marine fish can keep internal environment hypertonic by retaining trimethylamine oxide.
- Kangaroo rats survive without drinking water due to anhydrobiotic adaptation.
- Aquatic animals mainly excrete nitrogenous waste in the form of ammonia.
- Protonephridia are present in flatworms.
- Ammonia is the main nitrogenous waste formed in the body of earthworms.
- Malpighian tubules are associated with the gut of the organism.
- Juxtramedullary nephrons play an important role in the production of concentrated urine.
- Calcium oxalate kidney stones are the most common.
- Hemodialysis is the first treatment administered to a newly diagnosed renal failure patient.
- O2 is a waste product produced in plants during both photosynthesis and respiration.
- Excess nitrogen in animals is primarily excreted in the form of ammonia.
- Hydra has no specialized excretory system as its whole body cells are in contact with water.
- The distal blind end of the malpighian tubules bathes freely in the haemocoel.
- Metanephridium is a segmented excretory structure found in many invertebrates.
- Uric acid is the main nitrogenous waste formed in birds and reptiles.
- Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system helps regulate blood pressure and fluid balance.
- Nephron is the functional unit of the kidney responsible for filtration and urine formation.
- Loop of Henle creates a concentration gradient in the renal medulla.
- ADH (antidiuretic hormone) regulates water reabsorption in the collecting ducts.
- A countercurrent mechanism in the nephron helps to concentrate urine.
- Peritubular capillaries reabsorb substances from the renal tubules.
- The vasa recta is a network of blood vessels that surrounds the loop of Henle.
- Gout is a disorder caused by the accumulation of uric acid crystals in the joints.
- Uremia is a condition where waste products accumulate in the blood due to kidney dysfunction.
- Renal corpuscle consists of the glomerulus and Bowman’s capsule.
- Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is a measure of the kidney’s ability to filter blood.
- Angiotensin II is a potent vasoconstrictor and stimulates the release of aldosterone.
- Diabetes insipidus is a disorder characterized by excessive thirst and urination.
- Diuretics are medications that increase urine production and help reduce fluid retention.
- The juxtaglomerular apparatus regulates blood pressure and GFR.
- Aldosterone promotes sodium reabsorption and potassium excretion in the distal tubule.
- Renal clearance is a measure of how efficiently the kidneys remove a substance from the blood.
- Renal pelvis is the central collecting region in the kidney where urine accumulates before entering the ureter.
- Inulin is commonly used to measure GFR in clinical settings.