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anaerobic respiration
Respiration in the absence of oxygen. This produces lactic acid.
aerobic respiration
Respiration that requires oxygen
Aerobic word equation
glucose + oxygen --> carbon dioxide + water + energy
Anaerobic word equation
glucose -> lactic acid
Test for carbon dioxide
Turns limewater cloudy
Where does aerobic respiration occur?
mitochondria
Why do organisms need energy?
movement, maintain body temp, chemical reactions to build larger molecules
experiment to show: oxygen is taken up and co2 is released during AR?
- jog on spot for 5 mins
- measure BPM before jogging
- measure BPM after jogging for 5 mins
- find the difference in co2 and o2
what is muscle tissue made from?
protein fibres - they contact and relax to make the muscle move
structure of mitochondria for respiration
mitochondria have lots of folds in their membrane that increases surface area for respiration to take place
The body stores glucose as
glycogen
what happens when you exercise?
- heart and breathing rates increase
- body temp increases
- more oxygen being brought in
- fatigue
- sweating
- arteries supplying blood dilate
- increased amount of co2 removed
- cellular respiration increases to supply muscle cells with more energy
- increase in breath volume
- flow of oxygenated blood to the muscle increases
testing fitness
1. measure resting heart rate and breathing rate
2. the fitter you are the lower it'll be - fitter people have a bigger heart and lung - better supply of blood
3. exercise
4. measure heart rate and breathing rate after exercising
what do plant cells form anaerobically
ethanol and carbon dioxide
anaerobic respiration in yeast cells?
fermentation
Fermentation is used to make?
bread and alcohol
Fermentation equation
glucose → ethanol + carbon dioxide
the heart and breathing rate graph:
- the fitter you are the quicker your heart rate will drop back to normal
- breathing rate increases,in need for more oxygen
what effect increased fitness has on the heart and lungs:
heart- helps because more efficient and pump blood around your body better. This means that the heart pushes out more blood with each beat, allowing it to beat slower and keep your blood pressure under control.
lungs - can help improve lung capacity; the amount of oxygen you take in with each breath.
waste product of glucose molecules
lactic acud
oxygen debt
the amount of oxygen required to convert the lactic acid to glucose
how to get rid of the waste lactic acid?
when the exercise is over, lactic acid has to be converted back to glucose in the liver. the glucose produced may then may be broken down to produce co2 and water. this process needs oxygen.
waste products of aerobic
carbon dioxide and water
cellular respiration
exothermic reaction that occurs continuously in living cells
how to muscle fibres occur?
usually occur in big blocks or groups, which contract to cause movement.
glycogen
can be rapidly converted back to glucose to use during exercise
response to exercise
- muscles start contracting harder and faster
- need more glucose and oxygen for respiration
- produce increased amounts of co2 - needs to be removed for muscles to keep working
Metabolism of an organism
the sum of all reactions that take place in a cell or in the body
metabolic reactions
- conversion of glucose to starch, glycogen and cellulose
- photosynthesis
- respiration
- formation of lipid molecules from glycerol and three fatty acids molecules
role of liver
liver cells grow and regenerate themselves very rapidly. very active organ with many metabolic functions
metabolic functions in the liver:
- detoxifying poisonous substances like ethanol and alcohol
- passing the breakdown products in to the blood so they can be excreted in the urine via the kidneys
- breaking down old work out blood cells and stroring the iron until it's needed to synthesise more blood cells
Where is lactic acid broken down?
liver
lactic acid in the liver
blood flowing through the muscles transports lactic acid to the liver where it's converted back to glucose