Main features of circulatory systems.
General features of circulation
All
living organisms take in molecules from their environments,
use them to support the metabolism of their own substance,
and release by-products back into the environment. The
internal environment differs more or less greatly from
the external environment, depending on the species. It
is normally maintained at constant conditions by the organism
so that it is subject to relatively minor fluctuations.
In individual cells, either as independent organisms or
as parts of the tissues of multicellular animals, molecules
are taken in either by their directdiffusion through the
cell wall or by the formation by the surface membrane
of vacuoles that carry some of the environmental fluid
containing dissolved molecules. Within the cell, cyclosis
(streaming of the fluid cytoplasm) distributes the metabolic
products.
Molecules
are normally conveyed between cells and throughout the
body of multicellular organisms in a circulatory fluid,
called blood, through special channels, called blood vessels,
by some form of pump, which, if restricted in position,
is usually called a heart. In vertebrates blood and lymph
(the circulating fluids) have an essential role in maintaining
homeostasis (the constancy of the internal environment)
by distributing substances to parts of the body when required
and by removing others from areas in which their accumulation
would be harmful.
One
phylum, Cnidaria (Coelenterata)—which includes sea anemones,
jellyfish, and corals—has a diploblastic level of organization
(i.e., its members have two layers of cells). The outer
layer, called the ectoderm, and the inner layer, called
the endoderm, are separated by an amorphous, acellular
layer called the mesoglea; for these animals, bathing
both cellular surfaces with environmental fluid is sufficient
to supply their metabolic needs. All other major eumetazoan
phyla (i.e., those with defined tissues and organs) are
triploblastic (i.e., their members have three layers of
cells), with the third cellular layer, called the mesoderm,
developing between the endoderm and ectoderm. At its simplest,
the mesoderm provides a network of packing cells around
the animal's organs; this is probably best exhibited in
the phylum Platyhelminthes (flatworms).
Nematoda,
Rotifera, and a number of other smaller eumetazoan classes
and phyla have a fluid-filled cavity, called the pseudocoelom,
that arises from an embryonic cavity and contains the
internal organs free within it. All other eumetazoans
have a body cavity, the coelom, which originates as a
cavity in the embryonic mesoderm. Mesoderm lines the coelomand
forms the peritoneum, which also surrounds and supports
the internal organs. While this increase in complexity
allows for increase in animal size, it has certain problems.
As the distances from metabolizing cells to the source
of metabolites (molecules to be metabolized)increases,
a means of distribution around the body is necessary for
all but the smallest coelomates.
Many
invertebrate animals are aquatic and the problem of supplying
fluid is not critical. For terrestrial organisms, however,
the fluid reaching the tissues comes from water that has
beendrunk, absorbed in the alimentary canal, and passed
to the bloodstream. Fluid may leave the blood, usually
with food and other organic molecules in solution, and
pass to the tissues, fromwhich it returns in the form
of lymph. Especially in the vertebrates, lymph passes
through special pathways, called lymphatic channels, to
provide the lymphatic circulation.
In
many invertebrates, however, the circulating fluid is
not confined to distinct vessels, and it more or less
freely bathes the organs directly. The functions of both
circulating and tissue fluid are thus combined in the
fluid, often known as hemolymph. The possession of a blood
supply and coelom, however, does not exclude the circulation
of environmental water through the body. Members of the
phylum Echinodermata (starfishes and sea urchins, for
example) have a complex water vascular system used mainly
for locomotion.
An
internal circulatory system transports essential gases
and nutrients around the body of anorganism, removes unwanted
products of metabolism from the tissues, and carries these
products to specialized excretory organs, if present.
Although a few invertebrate animals circulate external
water through their bodies for respiration, and, in the
case of cnidarians, nutrition, most species circulate
an internal fluid, called blood.
There
may also be external circulation that sets up currents
in the environmental fluid to carry it over respiratory
surfaces and, especially in the case of sedentary animals,
to carry particulate food that is strained out and passed
to the alimentary canal. Additionally, the circulatory
system may assist the organism in movement; for example,
protoplasmic streaming in amoeboid protozoans circulates
nutrients and provides pseudopodal locomotion. The hydrostatic
pressure built up in the circulatory systems of many invertebrates
is used for a range of whole-body and individual-organ
movement.