Module 3: Transport Systems in Animals

These free OCR A Level Biology Transport Systems in Animals revision notes have been written for specification points 3.1.2(a) and 3.1.2(b).

The Need for Transport Systems

As an animal (and plant) increases in size and complexity, their surface area to volume ratio (SA:V) decreases; diffusion alone cannot meet its metabolic requirements.

The table below outlines the limitations on diffusion in multicellular animals:

LimitationReason
Low SA:V ratioA lower SA:V provides less space for substances to enter or leave
the organism via the skin compared to their volume.
High metabolismMetabolically active tissues (e.g. muscles, brain) need a high rate
of oxygen and glucose delivery for making ATP.
Long diffusion distanceInternal cells are far from the external surface, and those that aren’t may be covered by an impermeable barrier;
it takes too long for substances to get to where they are needed.

To overcome these limitations, animals have evolved specialised transport systems which: 

  • Deliver substances to cells (e.g. oxygen, glucose, amino acids, hormones)
  • Remove toxic waste products (e.g. carbon dioxide, urea)
  • Deliver hormones (hormonal signalling)

Types of Circulatory Systems

There are different types of circulatory systems, open and closed.

The table below compares closed and open circulatory systems:

FeatureOpen Circulatory SystemClosed Circulatory System
DefinitionBlood (or haemolymph) is not enclosed in vessels.Blood is enclosed in vessels.
ExamplesInsects (e.g. grasshoppers), molluscs (e.g. snails).Vertebrates (e.g. mammals, fish), some invertebrates (e.g. annelid worms).
Transport MediumHaemolymph: blood and tissue fluid (does not transport oxygen in insects).Blood: remains separate from tissue fluid.
PressureLow-pressure.High pressure (overall, varies).
Pumping Mechanism Varies:
• Body movement
• Peristalsis
• Heart (simple and open)
The heart pumps blood through vessels; capillaries allow exchange with tissues.

Types of Closed Circulatory Systems: Single and double

In OCR A level Biology, you need to know about the structure of the double circulatory system in mammals and the single circulatory system in fish (as well as the open circulatory system in insects).

The table below outlines the features of these three types of circulatory systems for comparison:

FeatureDouble (Mammals)Single (Fish)Open (Insects)
No. of circuits210
PathwayHeart → pulmonary → heart → systemicHeart → gills → bodyHeart → body
Heart passes per cycle211
Blood pressure to bodyHighLowLow
Oxygen flow to body • High flow
• High pressure
• Lower flow
• Lower pressure
None:
• No oxygen in haemolymph.
• Via tracheae.
Blood vesselsClosedClosedMostly absent*

*Some insects have open-ended tubular extensions on their heart that deliver blood to more metabolically active regions.

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