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(A-level) AQA Biology Homeostasis Topic Summary $4.81   Add to cart

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(A-level) AQA Biology Homeostasis Topic Summary

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In-depth summary for content covered in the Homeostasis topic of A-level AQA Biology. This will still be applicable to other exam boards, but take caution when looking at key-words and the order of specific processes.

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  • November 13, 2023
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  • 2022/2023
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Oliver Dyson


Homeostasis Notes (16)

Homeostasis and its importance:

Homeostasis is the maintenance of an internal environment within restricted limits

-> to ensure they don’t stray too far from optimal

 Ensuring health of cells, tissues and organs in an organism
 And helping with their function

The most common factors controlled are temperature, pH, water potential and blood glucose

-> these all are important when it comes to metabolism

 Enzymes are a significant reason for homeostasis, since they only work in a very specific
range of conditions – and therefore rely on these being maintained to function
 Water potential changes can also cause severe damage to cells and tissues, causing them to
shrink, or burst via lysis depending on what way the change goes

Water potential also changes blood pressure – which can have some nasty consequences

Control mechanisms:

Control of conditions relies on a series of stages:

 An optimum point – this is where a system operates best
 This is monitored by a receptor

This leads to changes (stimuli) being detected, leading to impulses which are linked to coordinators
and effectors

 Coordinator – brain / spinal cord
 Effector – muscle or gland which causes the response

Feedback mechanisms are also essential to homeostasis, and involve this series of events leading to
a specific response – this can be either negative or positive




Figure 1- reproduced from [1]

 Negative feedback – the change produced by a control system leads to a change in the
stimulus, turning the control response off and returning conditions to optimum
 Positive feedback – the system continues to increase the deviation from ‘optimum’ – which
is usually harmful

However, in processes such as sodium influx in neurones – this is essential for function

, Oliver Dyson


Ectotherms and Endotherms:

There are different types of organisms when it comes to maintenance of temperature

-> endotherms and ectotherms:

Ectotherms:

These animals gain heat from the environment

-> and so their body temperature is dependent on this

 Reptiles such as lizards are example of this
 They commonly expose themselves to sunlight in order to gain heat
 Or take shelter to prevent overheating

Endotherms:

These organism gain their heat form internal metabolic activities

-> meaning internal temperature is held constant for most of the time

 Apart from when extreme environmental conditions act
 They have a wide range of mechanisms to control body Figure 2 - reproduced from [1]
temperature

Vasoconstriction – increases the diameter of the blood vessels near the skin, increasing heat loss

-> shivering causes the muscles to contract and produce metabolic heat

 Raising of hair traps a layer of insulating air – preventing heat loss
 Increased metabolic rate leads to more respiration and heat
 Sweating can be used to control heat – as evaporating water causes energy losses from the
body

Behavioural mechanisms are also used by these animals – but it isn’t the main way temperature is
controlled



Hormones:

Hormones all vary in structure, but share a range of features

-> mostly in the way they function

 They are produced in endocrine glands, which secrete the hormone directly into the blood
 They are carried in the blood plasma to cells they act on

This are called ‘target cells / tissues / organs’

 They take longer to cause a response than nerve impulses
 But have longer lasting effects

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