Biology Year 11 · Module 2

Transport Systems in Animals — Overview and Blood

A grasshopper and a blue whale both need to move oxygen, nutrients, and waste products around their bodies. They have evolved radically different solutions to the same problem — and understanding why illuminates one of biology's most fundamental design principles.

Learning Intentions

  • Explain why multicellular organisms need transport systems
  • Compare open and closed circulatory systems with examples
  • Describe the four components of blood and what each transports
  • Explain how blood composition changes as it moves through the body
  • Interpret microscopic samples of blood

Outcome Links

  • Investigate transport systems in animals
  • Investigate microscopic samples of blood and the cardiovascular system
  • Compare open and closed transport systems
  • Connect to: gas exchange (L10), absorption (L12), organ systems (L04)

Success Criteria

  • Explain why SA:V ratio makes diffusion insufficient in large animals
  • Compare open and closed systems using specific structural evidence
  • Name all four blood components with their transported cargo
  • Explain how blood composition differs across key vessels
  • Write a Band 6 response comparing open and closed circulatory systems
HSC Exam Relevance

Content from this lesson that appears directly in HSC Biology exams

High Priority
Open vs closed circulatory systems — comparison

Comparing structure, pressure, efficiency, and examples of open vs closed systems. Tested as a 3–4 mark comparison question in most HSC papers. Must name specific animals and link structural differences to functional consequences.

High Priority
Blood composition and function

Identifying the four blood components, what each carries, and how composition changes along the circuit. Appears in microscopy interpretation questions (Section I, 1–2 marks) and mechanism questions (Section II, 2–3 marks).

Medium Priority
Why multicellular organisms need transport systems

Applying SA:V ratio to justify the need for circulatory systems. Tested as a 2–3 mark justification question: "Explain why large organisms cannot rely on diffusion alone."

Medium Priority
Microscopy — blood smear interpretation

Identifying RBCs, WBCs, and platelets from microscope images. Tested in Section I working scientifically — 1–2 marks. Must describe distinguishing features: shape, size, nucleus presence or absence.

Core Content

01

The Problem That Transport Systems Solve

Diffusion works for single cells. It fails spectacularly for whales.

In Lesson 10 you saw that as organisms grow larger, their SA:V ratio drops — the outer surface can no longer supply enough oxygen to interior cells by diffusion alone. The same logic applies to every substance a cell needs: glucose from the intestine, hormones from endocrine glands, waste products heading to the kidneys. A large body is simply too big for diffusion to cover the distances involved in any useful timeframe.

The numbers make this concrete. Diffusion of oxygen across 1 μm (one cell width) takes about 1 millisecond. Diffusion across 1 mm takes about 1 second. Diffusion across 1 cm takes about 100 seconds. Diffusion across 1 metre — the distance from your small intestine to your brain — would take approximately 11 days. A transport system replaces slow passive diffusion with rapid bulk flow, reducing that 11-day journey to a few seconds.

Two Requirements for Any Transport System
An effective transport system needs: (1) a transport medium — a fluid that carries dissolved substances (blood, haemolymph), and (2) a driving mechanism — something that keeps the fluid moving (a heart, or muscular body movements). The fluid alone does nothing without the driving force; the heart alone does nothing without a medium to pump.
02

Open vs Closed Circulatory Systems

Two evolutionary solutions — same problem, radically different results

The fundamental distinction between transport systems is whether the transport fluid stays inside vessels at all times, or whether it leaves vessels and bathes tissues directly.

🦗 Open System — Insects
🫀 Closed System — Mammals

Transport fluid (haemolymph) is pumped by a tubular heart into the body cavity (haemocoel), where it directly bathes organs and tissues. There are no blood vessels beyond the heart — haemolymph pools around organs and slowly drains back through openings called ostia.

  • Fluid: haemolymph — does not carry O₂ in insects
  • Pressure: low — fluid is not contained in vessels
  • Speed: slow — no maintained pressure gradient
  • Exchange: direct bathing of tissues

Transport fluid (blood) is pumped by a chambered heart and remains inside a continuous network of vessels (arteries → capillaries → veins) at all times. Exchange with tissues occurs only at thin-walled capillaries.

  • Fluid: blood — haemoglobin carries O₂
  • Pressure: high — maintained throughout by the heart
  • Speed: fast — high pressure drives rapid flow
  • Exchange: only at thin-walled capillaries
Key Comparison Points
Oxygen transport: Insects don't use haemolymph for O₂ — the tracheal system (L10) delivers O₂ directly to cells. Haemolymph carries nutrients and waste only.
Oxygen transport: Blood is the primary O₂ carrier — haemoglobin in red blood cells binds O₂ at the lungs and releases it at body tissues.
Efficiency: Adequate for small, less metabolically active animals. Cannot maintain high enough delivery rates for large or highly active organisms.
Efficiency: High pressure enables rapid, directed delivery to every tissue — supports large body size and high metabolic rates (flight, sustained running).
Blood pressure: Very low — fluid not contained. Injury causes minimal haemolymph loss as there is no pressure driving it out rapidly.
Blood pressure: High — maintained by heart and vessel walls. Injury can cause rapid blood loss, requiring clotting response (platelets, fibrin).
Examples: All insects, most molluscs (except cephalopods), most arthropods
Examples: All vertebrates (fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, mammals), cephalopod molluscs (octopus, squid — convergent evolution)
The Octopus Exception
Octopuses are molluscs — yet they have a closed circulatory system with three hearts. This is convergent evolution: their high metabolic demands as active predators made an open system inadequate, driving the same solution independently from vertebrates. It is strong evidence that closed circulation is the superior solution for high-activity lifestyles.
03

Blood — The Transport Medium

Four components, each with a distinct job

Blood is not a simple fluid — it is a complex tissue. A pinhead-sized drop contains approximately 5 million red blood cells, 10,000 white blood cells, and 250,000 platelets, all suspended in plasma. Each component carries different cargo and serves a distinct function.

🔴

Red Blood Cells (Erythrocytes)

~5 million per mm³ · ~120-day lifespan

Biconcave disc shape — no nucleus at maturity. Small and flexible — can squeeze through capillaries narrower than the cell itself.

  • Carries: O₂ (bound to haemoglobin) and CO₂ (as bicarbonate HCO₃⁻ in plasma)
  • Biconcave shape: Increases SA:V → more haemoglobin exposed → faster O₂ loading/unloading
  • No nucleus: More haemoglobin space; cannot divide — fixed lifespan

White Blood Cells (Leukocytes)

~7,000–10,000 per mm³ · Variable lifespan

Larger than RBCs, with visible nuclei. Multiple subtypes with different immune roles. Can exit blood vessels to reach infection sites (diapedesis).

  • Not a transport function — WBCs are the immune patrol
  • Functions: Phagocytosis (neutrophils), antibody production (B lymphocytes), cell-mediated immunity (T lymphocytes)
  • Key: Only B lymphocytes produce antibodies — not all WBCs
🟡

Platelets (Thrombocytes)

~250,000 per mm³ · ~10-day lifespan

Cell fragments derived from megakaryocytes in bone marrow. No nucleus. Smallest formed element in blood.

  • Carries: Clotting factors and signalling molecules
  • Function: Aggregate at wounds → release clotting factors → trigger fibrin mesh (haemostasis)
  • Clinical: Low platelets → impaired clotting → bruising, prolonged bleeding
💧

Plasma

~55% of blood volume · 90% water

Straw-coloured liquid matrix suspending all blood cells. Contains an enormous variety of dissolved substances in transit.

  • Carries: Glucose, amino acids, fatty acids (lipoproteins), CO₂ (as HCO₃⁻), hormones, antibodies, urea, vitamins, minerals, heat
  • Key proteins: Albumin (osmotic pressure), fibrinogen (clotting), immunoglobulins (immunity)
04

How Blood Composition Changes Along the Circuit

Blood leaving the heart is not the same blood returning — IQ3 in action

One of IQ3's core questions asks: "How does the composition of the transport medium change as it moves around an organism?" Every tissue blood passes through takes something from it or adds something to it — and the changes are predictable and measurable.

❤️ Arterial Blood — Leaving the Heart
🫀 Venous Blood — Returning to the Heart
  • O₂: High (haemoglobin saturated — oxygenated)
  • CO₂: Low
  • Glucose: Relatively high (regulated by liver)
  • Urea: Lower (not yet passed through metabolising tissues producing urea)
  • Colour: Bright red (oxyhaemoglobin)
  • O₂: Lower (O₂ unloaded to tissues)
  • CO₂: Higher (added from cellular respiration in tissues)
  • Glucose: Lower (consumed by tissues for respiration)
  • Urea: Higher (produced by liver from amino acid catabolism)
  • Colour: Dark red/maroon (deoxyhaemoglobin)
Specific Vessels — What Changes Where
Pulmonary vein (lungs → heart): Highest O₂ · Lowest CO₂ — fully reoxygenated after gas exchange at alveoli
Pulmonary artery (heart → lungs): Lowest O₂ · Highest CO₂ — deoxygenated blood en route to be reoxygenated
Hepatic portal vein (intestine → liver, post-meal): Highest glucose + amino acids — blood enriched with absorbed nutrients from small intestine
Hepatic vein (liver → vena cava): Glucose regulated (some stored as glycogen) · Urea added · Amino acids processed
Renal artery (heart → kidneys): High urea — blood arriving with accumulated metabolic waste
Renal vein (kidneys → heart): Low urea — filtered; ionic composition regulated by kidney
HSC Trap — Pulmonary Artery
The pulmonary artery is an artery (carries blood away from the heart) but carries deoxygenated blood. Arteries are defined by direction relative to the heart, not by oxygen content. This is one of the most frequently tested misconceptions in this module — always define artery/vein by direction, not by what they carry.
05

Common Misconceptions — Blood and Circulation

Five errors that cost marks in HSC exams every year

These misconceptions appear regularly in HSC scripts. Each reveals a conceptual gap — examiners identify and penalise them specifically.

✗ Common Misconception
✓ What's Actually True
"Arteries carry oxygenated blood and veins carry deoxygenated blood."
Arteries carry blood away from the heart; veins carry blood toward the heart. The pulmonary artery carries deoxygenated blood (heart → lungs). Direction, not oxygen content, is the defining rule.
"Deoxygenated blood is blue — that's why veins look blue under the skin."
Deoxygenated blood is dark red/maroon — not blue. Veins appear blue through skin due to the optical properties of tissue absorbing red light differently to blue. Blood is never blue inside a living body.
"White blood cells fight infection by producing antibodies."
Only B lymphocytes produce antibodies — one specific WBC subtype. Other WBCs (neutrophils, monocytes, NK cells) fight infection through phagocytosis, inflammation, or direct cell killing. Saying "WBCs produce antibodies" is imprecise and will lose marks.
"Insects have blood — it just carries less oxygen than mammal blood."
Insect haemolymph carries no oxygen at all — oxygen is delivered directly to cells via the tracheal system. Haemolymph transports nutrients and waste only. This is a fundamental structural difference from vertebrate blood, not just a quantitative one.
"Plasma and serum are the same thing."
Plasma contains all blood proteins including clotting factors (fibrinogen). Serum is plasma with clotting factors removed — it remains after blood has clotted. The distinction matters in clinical diagnostics: antibody tests use serum.

Copy into your books

Open vs Closed Systems

  • Open: haemolymph bathes organs in haemocoel; low pressure; insects.
  • Closed: blood in vessels at all times; high pressure; all vertebrates.
  • Insects: haemolymph carries nutrients/waste only — O₂ via tracheal system.
  • Octopus = mollusc but has closed system (convergent evolution).

Four Blood Components

  • RBCs: biconcave, no nucleus, haemoglobin → O₂ and CO₂.
  • WBCs: nucleated, immune function (phagocytosis, antibodies via B cells).
  • Platelets: cell fragments, clotting factors → haemostasis.
  • Plasma: 55% volume, carries glucose/AA/hormones/urea/CO₂/heat.

Artery vs Vein — Direction Rule

  • Artery: away from heart — may carry oxygenated OR deoxygenated blood.
  • Vein: toward heart — may carry oxygenated OR deoxygenated blood.
  • Pulmonary artery: deoxygenated (heart → lungs).
  • Pulmonary vein: oxygenated (lungs → heart).

Blood Composition Changes

  • Across body tissues: O₂ drops, CO₂ rises, glucose drops.
  • Across liver: glucose regulated, urea added, amino acids processed.
  • Across kidneys: urea drops (filtered and excreted).
  • Across lungs: O₂ rises, CO₂ drops (gas exchange).

Activities

Activity 01

Blood Smear Microscopy — Identification and Interpretation

Working scientifically — interpreting microscopic samples.

A standard blood smear shows a stained sample viewed under a light microscope. Using your knowledge of blood components, answer the following questions.

  1. Describe the appearance of a red blood cell as seen under light microscopy — shape, colour after staining, and what structural feature you would NOT see compared to white blood cells.
  2. A blood smear from a patient shows a significantly elevated number of white blood cells. Suggest two conditions that could cause this and explain your reasoning for each.
  3. Explain why a red blood cell stained with a DNA-specific stain would appear unstained, while a white blood cell would stain positive.
  4. A student sees cells in the smear that are much smaller than red blood cells and appear as irregular fragments. Identify these cells, state their origin, and describe their function.
Activity 02

Blood Composition — Tracing Changes Around the Circuit

IQ3 in practice: predict how transport medium composition changes at each location.

For each vessel, predict whether O₂, CO₂, glucose, and urea are at HIGH or LOW concentration compared to blood in the aorta, and give a one-line reason.

VesselO₂CO₂GlucoseUrea
Pulmonary vein
lungs → heart
Hepatic portal vein
intestine → liver (post-meal)
Renal vein
kidneys → heart
Activity 03

Extended Response — Open vs Closed Comparison

Classic HSC Section II comparison question — practise structure and language.

"Compare open and closed circulatory systems in animals. In your answer, describe the structure of each system, identify an animal example for each, and explain one advantage of the closed system over the open system." (5 marks)

Use: whereas / in contrast / however. Five distinct marking points: define open → define closed → example each → one structural difference → functional advantage explained.

Assessment

MC

Multiple Choice

Select the best answer — feedback shown immediately

1. Which vessel carries deoxygenated blood at high pressure away from the heart?

A
Pulmonary vein
B
Aorta
C
Pulmonary artery
D
Vena cava

2. Which of the following correctly explains why insects can survive with an open circulatory system while large vertebrates cannot?

A
Insects have a more efficient haemoglobin that allows haemolymph to carry sufficient oxygen even at low pressure.
B
Insect cells have lower metabolic rates and require less frequent delivery of nutrients and removal of waste.
C
Insects have no muscles and therefore do not need rapid nutrient delivery during activity.
D
Insects use a separate tracheal system for oxygen delivery, so haemolymph only needs to transport nutrients and waste over short distances at low pressure — a task achievable with slow, unpressurised flow.

3. A mature red blood cell has no nucleus. Which of the following is the most significant functional consequence of this?

A
More space is available for haemoglobin, maximising oxygen-carrying capacity — however the cell cannot divide or repair itself, limiting its lifespan to approximately 120 days.
B
The cell passes through capillaries more easily because the nucleus would otherwise make the cell rigid and inflexible.
C
The cell cannot produce antibodies, which is why immune function is performed by white blood cells instead.
D
The cell avoids immune targeting because the immune system identifies foreign cells by nuclear DNA.

4. Blood sampled from the hepatic portal vein two hours after a large carbohydrate meal would show which composition compared to blood in the aorta?

A
Lower glucose, lower O₂, lower CO₂
B
Higher glucose, lower O₂, higher CO₂
C
Higher glucose, higher O₂, lower CO₂
D
Lower glucose, higher O₂, lower CO₂

5. Which of the following is a correct similarity between open and closed circulatory systems?

A
Both have a pumping organ (heart) that drives the movement of transport fluid through the body.
B
Both use haemoglobin to transport oxygen to cells throughout the body.
C
Both maintain transport fluid inside a closed network of vessels at all times.
D
Both are equally capable of supplying nutrients to large, highly active bodies.
SA

Short Answer

6. Explain why large multicellular animals require specialised transport systems, referring to the SA:V ratio principle. 3 MARKS

7. Describe the structure and function of red blood cells. Explain how two structural features are specifically adapted to maximise oxygen transport. 4 MARKS

Two features × two marks each: structure → function link.

8. Compare the composition of blood in the pulmonary artery and the pulmonary vein, and explain the changes that occur between these two vessels. 3 MARKS

Comprehensive Answers

Multiple Choice

1. C — The pulmonary artery carries deoxygenated blood from the right ventricle to the lungs at high pressure. Pulmonary vein carries oxygenated blood back to the heart; the aorta carries oxygenated blood at high pressure away from the left ventricle; the vena cava is a vein carrying blood toward the heart.

2. D — Insects' tracheal system delivers O₂ directly to cells independently of haemolymph. This means haemolymph only needs to transport nutrients and waste — tasks achievable at low pressure. Large vertebrates cannot do this because tracheal diffusion becomes too slow over large body distances.

3. A — The primary benefit is maximised haemoglobin content, and the direct trade-off is no DNA → no cell division → fixed ~120-day lifespan. Flexibility comes from the biconcave disc shape and elastic cell membrane, not from nucleus absence.

4. B — Post-meal, glucose absorbed from the small intestine enriches the hepatic portal vein → higher glucose. Intestinal cells are metabolically active during absorption, consuming O₂ and producing CO₂ → lower O₂ and higher CO₂ than the aorta.

5. A — Both open and closed systems have a pumping organ: a tubular heart in insects, a chambered heart in mammals. Haemoglobin is absent from insect open systems; closed vessels are only in closed systems; open systems cannot supply large active bodies.

Q6 — Model Answer

As body size increases, volume increases proportionally faster than surface area, causing the SA:V ratio to decrease. This means the outer body surface area relative to the volume of cells needing supply becomes progressively smaller.

Diffusion over distances greater than a few millimetres is extremely slow — diffusing across 1 metre would take approximately 11 days. Interior cells of a large organism would receive oxygen and nutrients far too slowly to sustain life by diffusion from the body surface alone.

A specialised transport system solves this using bulk flow — the heart pumps blood under pressure through a vessel network, delivering oxygen and nutrients to within diffusion distance of every cell in seconds rather than days.

Q7 — Model Answer

Feature 1 — Biconcave disc shape: RBCs have a flattened biconcave disc shape — depressed on both faces. This increases the surface area to volume ratio compared to a sphere of equivalent volume, exposing more haemoglobin molecules to O₂ at the cell membrane and reducing the maximum diffusion distance from membrane to any interior haemoglobin molecule. Both effects accelerate O₂ loading at the lungs and unloading at body tissues.

Feature 2 — No nucleus at maturity: Mature RBCs eject their nucleus during development, freeing approximately 40% more internal volume for haemoglobin. Each mature RBC contains approximately 280 million haemoglobin molecules — maximising O₂-carrying capacity per cell. The trade-off is that without a nucleus, the cell cannot produce proteins, divide, or repair damage, limiting its lifespan to approximately 120 days before breakdown and replacement by new cells from bone marrow.

Q8 — Model Answer

The pulmonary artery carries blood from the right ventricle to the lungs — it contains low O₂ (haemoglobin largely unloaded from previous systemic circulation) and high CO₂ (accumulated from cellular respiration throughout the body).

The pulmonary vein carries blood from the lungs back to the left atrium — it contains high O₂ (haemoglobin fully saturated) and low CO₂.

These changes occur because in the alveolar capillaries, O₂ diffuses from alveolar air (high O₂ partial pressure) into the blood (low O₂ partial pressure), binding to haemoglobin. Simultaneously, CO₂ diffuses from blood (high CO₂ partial pressure) into alveolar air (low CO₂ partial pressure) and is exhaled. Both movements are driven by concentration gradients maintained by continuous ventilation refreshing the alveolar air.

Mark lesson as complete

Tick when you've finished all activities and checked your answers.

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