Osmoregulation & Excretion (DP IB Biology)
Revision Note
Osmoregulation & Excretion
The kidney has two roles in the body of mammals
Excretion
Osmoregulation
Excretion
Excretion is the process by which toxic waste products of metabolism are removed from the body
The kidneys are involved with the excretion of nitrogenous waste
Nitrogenous waste comes from the breakdown of excess dietary amino acids and nucleic acids
The waste is first converted into ammonia
Ammonia is highly toxic; it cannot be stored in the body and must therefore be removed quickly from the body
Some organisms convert highly toxic ammonia into less toxic urea; urea can remain in the body at low concentrations, but needs to be excreted before it builds up to a harmful level
Organisms that excrete urea need to dilute it with water to form urine before it is excreted
Urine is produced in the kidneys
Osmoregulation
Living organisms need to maintain a safe balance of water and solutes in their cells; this is the osmotic concentration of the cells
Failure to maintain this balance will mean that an organism's cells could either take on water and burst, or lose water and shrink due to the effects of osmosis
Cells with a lower water potential than their surrounding environment will gain water by osmosis and the resulting internal pressure increase could cause the cell to burst
Note that plant cells are protected from bursting by their strong cell walls
Cells with a higher water potential than their surrounding environment will lose water by osmosis and the resulting drop in internal pressure will cause the cell to shrink
The units for osmotic concentration are osmoles per litre (osmol L−1)
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