Zo 503 Comparative Physiology by DR - Poornima
Zo 503 Comparative Physiology by DR - Poornima
Zo 503 Comparative Physiology by DR - Poornima
Physiological Chemistry
MZO503
PART III
Poornima Vishwakarma
Academic Consultant
Zoology Department
Uttarakhand Open University
COMPARATIVE PHYSIOLOGY
OF
CIRCULATION
CIRCULATORY SYSTEM
The circulatory system is made up of blood vessels that carry blood away from and
towards the heart. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and veins carry blood back
to the heart. The circulatory system carries oxygen, nutrients, and hormones to cells,
and removes waste products, like carbon dioxide.
There are a few vital functions that all circulatory systems must serve. These include:
Capillaries
Arteries branch into small passages called arterioles and then into the capillaries The
capillaries merge to bring blood into the venous system.
Veins
Capillaries merge into venules, which merge into veins. The venous system feeds into the two
major veins: the superior vena cava – which mainly drains tissues above the heart – and
the inferior vena cava – which mainly drains tissues below the heart. These two large veins
empty into the right atrium of the heart.
DIAGRAM SHOWING ARTERIES, VEINS AND CAPILLARIES
Circulatory System is broadly divided into two categories, which are:
Larger and more active animals, including all vertebrates, have a closed circulatory
system.
This more complex system consists primarily of blood, the heart and a network of blood
vessels.
The main functions of the circulatory system are gas exchange, hormone and nutrient
distribution, and waste elimination.
The two major processes of the system are pulmonary circulation and systemic circulation.
In the former process, deoxygenated blood is passed through the lungs for gas exchange, in
order to receive oxygen from inhaled air.
Next, systemic circulation distributes the newly oxygenated blood throughout the body.
The blood picks up carbon dioxide, a metabolism waste product, from cells, and brings it
back to the lungs again.
In a closed circulatory system, blood is directed through arteries to veins and to smaller
blood vessels throughout the body.
As opposed to bathing all tissues and organs with blood, the blood remains in vessels and
is transported at high pressures to and from all extremities of the body at a rapid rate.
Advantages of the Closed System
The closed system operates with a much higher blood pressure. It is more efficient in that
it uses less blood for even higher and faster levels of distribution.
Since oxygenated blood may reach the extremities of the body faster than with an open
system, organisms with a closed system may have higher metabolisms, allowing them to
move, digest and eliminate wastes more rapidly.
Due to the efficient distribution of antibodies, immune responses are stronger, helping the
body to fight off infection more effectively.
OPEN V/S CLOSED CIRCULATORY SYSTEM
TWO-CHAMBERED HEART
(1 ATRIUM AND 1 VENTRICLE)
SYSTEMIC CIRCULATION
Systemic circulation is the portion of the cardiovascular system which transports oxygenated
blood away from the heart through the aorta from the left ventricle where the blood has been
previously deposited from pulmonary circulation, to the rest of the body, and returns oxygen-
depleted blood back to the heart.
SYSTEMIC AND PULMONARY CIRCULATION