Menu Top
Non-Rationalised Science NCERT Notes and Solutions (Class 6th to 10th)
6th 7th 8th 9th 10th
Non-Rationalised Science NCERT Notes and Solutions (Class 11th)
Physics Chemistry Biology
Non-Rationalised Science NCERT Notes and Solutions (Class 12th)
Physics Chemistry Biology

Class 11th (Biology) Chapters
1. The Living World 2. Biological Classification 3. Plant Kingdom
4. Animal Kingdom 5. Morphology Of Flowering Plants 6. Anatomy Of Flowering Plants
7. Structural Organisation In Animals 8. Cell - The Unit Of Life 9. Biomolecules
10. Cell Cycle And Cell Division 11. Transport In Plants 12. Mineral Nutrition
13. Photosynthesis In Higher Plants 14. Respiration In Plants 15. Plant - Growth And Development
16. Digestion And Absorption 17. Breathing And Exchange Of Gases 18. Body Fluids And Circulation
19. Excretory Products And Their Elimination 20. Locomotion And Movement 21. Neural Control And Coordination
22. Chemical Coordination And Integration



Chapter 19 Excretory Products And Their Elimination



Animals accumulate various substances, including nitrogenous wastes (ammonia, urea, uric acid), carbon dioxide, water, and excess ions (Na$^+$, K$^+$, Cl$^-$, phosphate, sulphate). These substances arise from metabolic activities or excess intake and must be removed, either completely or partially, to maintain healthy tissue function.

The process of eliminating these waste materials, particularly nitrogenous wastes, is called excretion.

Major forms of nitrogenous wastes excreted by animals are ammonia, urea, and uric acid. These differ in toxicity and the amount of water required for elimination:

Based on the primary nitrogenous waste product, animals are classified into three types:


Excretory structures vary widely across the animal kingdom:

Examples of excretory structures in invertebrates and some lower chordates:



Human Excretory System

The human excretory system (urinary system) consists of (Figure 19.1):

Diagram of the human urinary system showing kidneys, ureters, urinary bladder, and urethra.

Kidneys:

Nephrons: Each kidney contains nearly one million complex tubular structures called nephrons, which are the functional units of the kidney (Figure 19.3).

Diagrammatic representation of a nephron showing its parts: glomerulus, Bowman's capsule, PCT, loop of Henle (descending and ascending limbs), DCT, collecting duct, afferent and efferent arterioles, peritubular capillaries, and vasa recta.

Each nephron has two parts:

  1. Glomerulus: A tuft of capillaries formed by the afferent arteriole (a fine branch of the renal artery). Blood leaves the glomerulus via the efferent arteriole.
  2. Renal Tubule: Begins with Bowman's capsule, a double-walled cup-like structure enclosing the glomerulus.
    • Malpighian body (Renal corpuscle): Consists of the glomerulus enclosed within Bowman's capsule (Figure 19.4).
    • Diagram showing the Malpighian body (renal corpuscle) consisting of the glomerulus within Bowman's capsule, with afferent and efferent arterioles.
    • Proximal Convoluted Tubule (PCT): Highly coiled network extending from Bowman's capsule.
    • Henle's loop: Hairpin-shaped portion with a descending limb and an ascending limb.
    • Distal Convoluted Tubule (DCT): Another highly coiled region extending from the ascending limb of Henle's loop.

Collecting Duct: DCTs of many nephrons open into a straight tube called the collecting duct. Many collecting ducts converge and open into the renal pelvis through the medullary pyramids.

Location of nephron parts:

Vascular network around tubules: The efferent arteriole forms a fine capillary network around the renal tubule called peritubular capillaries. A 'U' shaped vessel called vasa recta runs parallel to Henle's loop; it is formed from the peritubular capillaries and is absent or reduced in cortical nephrons.

Ureters: A pair of tubes that carry urine from the renal pelvis of each kidney down to the urinary bladder.

Urinary bladder: A muscular sac that stores urine temporarily.

Urethra: A tube that carries urine from the urinary bladder to the outside of the body.



Urine Formation

Urine formation is a complex process involving three main steps that occur in different parts of the nephron:

  1. Glomerular Filtration (Ultrafiltration):
    • First step in urine formation, carried out by the glomerulus.
    • Blood is filtered from the glomerular capillaries into the lumen of Bowman's capsule.
    • Driving force: Glomerular capillary blood pressure.
    • Filtration membrane: Blood is filtered across three thin layers: endothelium of glomerular capillaries, epithelium of Bowman's capsule (podocytes with filtration slits), and the basement membrane between them.
    • Fine filtration: Almost all plasma constituents, except large proteins, pass into the Bowman's capsule lumen. This non-selective filtration is called ultrafiltration.

    Glomerular Filtration Rate (GFR): The amount of filtrate formed by the kidneys per minute. In a healthy individual, GFR is approximately 125 ml/minute, which equals about 180 liters per day.

    Regulation of GFR: Kidneys have autoregulatory mechanisms. The Juxta Glomerular Apparatus (JGA), a specialized region where the DCT and afferent arteriole meet, plays a key role. A drop in GFR activates JG cells to release renin, which increases glomerular blood flow and restores GFR.

  2. Reabsorption:
    • Since 180 liters of filtrate are formed daily but only about 1.5 liters of urine are excreted, nearly 99% of the filtrate must be reabsorbed by the renal tubules.
    • Tubular epithelial cells in different nephron segments reabsorb substances from the filtrate back into the blood.
    • Some substances (glucose, amino acids, Na$^+$) are reabsorbed actively (requiring energy).
    • Nitrogenous wastes are reabsorbed by passive transport.
    • Water reabsorption also occurs passively, especially in the initial segments.
  3. Secretion:
    • Tubular cells actively secrete substances like H$^+$, K$^+$, and ammonia into the filtrate.
    • This is an important step for maintaining the ionic balance, pH (acid-base balance), and waste removal from body fluids.


Function Of The Tubules

Different segments of the renal tubule perform specific functions in urine formation (Figure 19.5):

Diagram showing a nephron and associated blood vessels, illustrating reabsorption and secretion of major substances (water, ions, glucose, amino acids, urea) in different parts (PCT, Loop of Henle, DCT, collecting duct) and the direction of movement.


Mechanism Of Concentration Of The Filtrate

Mammals can produce concentrated urine due to the specialized structure and arrangement of Henle's loop and vasa recta, which operate as a counter current mechanism (Figure 19.6).

Diagrammatic representation of a nephron and vasa recta, illustrating the countercurrent flow of filtrate in Henle's loop and blood in vasa recta, and the establishment and maintenance of the increasing osmolarity gradient in the medullary interstitium.

Counter current system:

Mechanism for maintaining medullary osmolarity gradient (increasing from 300 mOsmol/L in cortex to 1200 mOsmol/L in inner medulla):

The counter current mechanism, facilitated by the proximity and opposing flows in Henle's loop and vasa recta, maintains this increasing osmolarity gradient in the medullary interstitium.

Concentration of urine: The presence of this high osmolarity gradient in the interstitium outside the collecting duct facilitates the osmotic withdrawal of water from the collecting duct as the filtrate passes through. This results in the production of concentrated urine.

Human kidneys can produce urine nearly four times more concentrated than the initial filtrate.



Regulation Of Kidney Function

Kidney function is regulated by hormonal feedback mechanisms involving the hypothalamus, JGA, and heart.



Micturition

Urine formed by nephrons is stored in the urinary bladder. The process of releasing urine from the bladder is called micturition.

Mechanism:

The neural mechanisms causing micturition constitute the micturition reflex. Micturition is a voluntary process (consciously controlled relaxation of the external urethral sphincter).

Characteristics of urine:

Urine analysis is a valuable tool for clinical diagnosis. Presence of glucose (glycosuria) and ketone bodies (ketonuria) in urine can indicate diabetes mellitus.



Role Of Other Organs In Excretion

Besides the kidneys, other organs assist in the elimination of excretory wastes:



Disorders Of The Excretory System

Malfunctioning of kidneys or other parts of the excretory system can lead to various disorders:



Exercises



Question 1. Define Glomerular Filtration Rate (GFR)

Answer:

Question 2. Explain the autoregulatory mechanism of GFR.

Answer:

Question 3. Indicate whether the following statements are true or false :

(a) Micturition is carried out by a reflex.

(b) ADH helps in water elimination, making the urine hypotonic.

(c) Protein-free fluid is filtered from blood plasma into the Bowman’s capsule.

(d) Henle’s loop plays an important role in concentrating the urine.

(e) Glucose is actively reabsorbed in the proximal convoluted tubule.

Answer:

Question 4. Give a brief account of the counter current mechanism.

Answer:

Question 5. Describe the role of liver, lungs and skin in excretion.

Answer:

Question 6. Explain micturition.

Answer:

Question 7. Match the items of column I with those of column II :

Column I Column II
(a) Ammonotelism (i) Birds
(b) Bowman’s capsule (ii) Water reabsorption
(c) Micturition (iii) Bony fish
(d) Uricotelism (iv) Urinary bladder
(e) ADH (v) Renal tubule

Answer:

Question 8. What is meant by the term osmoregulation?

Answer:

Question 9. Terrestrial animals are generally either ureotelic or uricotelic, not ammonotelic, why ?

Answer:

Question 10. What is the significance of juxta glomerular apparatus (JGA) in kidney function?

Answer:

Question 11. Name the following:

(a) A chordate animal having flame cells as excretory structures

(b) Cortical portions projecting between the medullary pyramids in the human kidney

(c) A loop of capillary running parallel to the Henle’s loop.

Answer:

Question 12. Fill in the gaps :

(a) Ascending limb of Henle’s loop is _______ to water whereas the descending limb is _______ to it.

(b) Reabsorption of water from distal parts of the tubules is facilitated by hormone _______.

(c) Dialysis fluid contain all the constituents as in plasma except _______.

(d) A healthy adult human excretes (on an average) _______ gm of urea/day.

Answer: