Animals Move

Type of Skeletal System

Endoskeleton

Internal Skeleton

Exoskeleton

External Skeleton

Anthropods

Hydrostatic Skeletal

Fluid Skeleton

Soft-Bodied Invertebrates

Skeletal System (20.2)

The Human Skeleton

Shape

Built For Upright Walking

Bone Function

Movement

Protection

Mineral Storage

Support For Soft Organs

Parts

Skull

Pelvic Gridle

Pectoral Gridle

s

Subtopic

Vertebrae (Singular)

Vertebral Column (Plural)

Intervertebral Disks

Rib Cage

Skeletal Joints

Joint

Fibrous Joint

Cartilaginous Joint

Synovial Joints

Ligements

Connective Tissue

Hold Bones

Types Of Bones

Compact Bones

Spongy Bones

Shafts and Ends of femur

Types of Marrows

Red Marrow

Yellow Marrow

Exercise and Inactivity(20.6)

Inactivity

Increase

Risk of Cardiovascular Diseases

Diabetes

Metabolic Changes in Muscle

Exercise

Increase

Protein Filaments

Mitochondria

How Muscles Contacts

Skeletal Muscle Fibers

Myofibrils

Contractile Units

Sacromeres

Two Parallel Arrays

Sliding-Filament Model

Actin

Thin Filaments

Myosin

Thick Filaments

Bulking Up Muscles (20.1)

Increase

Skeletal Muscles Mass

Growth Hormone

Testosteron

Mutation

Eliminates Myostatin

(RPM) Regulatory Protein Myostatin

Discourages Muscle Growth

Function of Skeletal Muscles (20.3)

Tendons

Connective Tissue

Sphincter

Ring of Muscle

Controls Passage

Tubular organ/opening

Fueling Muscles Contraction 20.5)

Three Main Pathways

Dephosphorylation

Aerobic Respiration

Red Muscle Fibers

Lactate Fermentation

White Muscle Fibers

Egin klik hemen zure diagrama zentratzeko.
Egin klik hemen zure diagrama zentratzeko.