Summary
Class 11 Biology Chapter 16 covers the human excretory system, urine formation through glomerular filtration and reabsorption, and hormonal regulation of kidney function. Learn the nephron structure, osmotic mechanisms, and disorders like uremia treated via hemodialysis.
Excretory Products and Their Elimination focuses on how organisms remove nitrogen-containing wastes—ammonia, urea, and uric acid—depending on habitat and water availability. In humans, the kidneys filter approximately 1200 ml of blood per minute through nephrons (functional units), producing a glomerular filtration rate of 125 ml/minute. Urine formation involves three processes: glomerular filtration (ultrafiltration), reabsorption of essential substances (99% of filtrate), and secretion of wastes. The loop of Henle and vasa recta employ a countercurrent mechanism to concentrate urine and conserve water. Hormonal regulation via ADH, renin-angiotensin mechanism, and ANF ensures kidney function maintains ionic and pH balance. The chapter also covers other organs' excretory roles (lungs expel CO₂, liver secretes bile, skin via sweat) and disorders including uremia treated by hemodialysis and kidney transplantation.
Key points & formulas
- 01Nitrogenous waste forms—ammonia (highly toxic, needs water), urea (moderate toxicity), uric acid (least toxic)—vary by organism habitat and adaptation
- 02Nephron structure: glomerulus + Bowman's capsule (Malpighian body), proximal convoluted tubule, Henle's loop, distal convoluted tubule, collecting duct; human kidneys contain ~1 million nephrons
- 03Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) ~125 ml/minute (180 L/day); 99% reabsorbed by tubules through active/passive transport, leaving ~1.5 L urine excreted daily
- 04Counter current mechanism: Henle's loop and vasa recta maintain osmotic gradient (300–1200 mOsmol/L) to concentrate filtrate up to 4× via NaCl and urea recycling
- 05Hormonal regulation: ADH promotes water reabsorption; renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system increases GFR and blood pressure; ANF counteracts by vasodilation
- 06Micturition (urination) triggered by bladder stretch receptors signaling CNS, which initiates smooth muscle contraction and sphincter relaxation; healthy adult excretes 1–1.5 L urine/day
Frequently asked questions
01What is glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and how much blood do kidneys filter per minute?
GFR is the amount of filtrate (protein-free plasma) formed per minute. Healthy kidneys filter approximately 1100–1200 ml of blood per minute, producing 125 ml of filtrate per minute, which totals ~180 litres per day. Glomerular capillary pressure drives this ultrafiltration through three layers: endothelium, basement membrane, and Bowman's capsule epithelium (podocytes with filtration slits).
02How do the loop of Henle and vasa recta concentrate urine?
The counter current mechanism uses the opposing flow of filtrate through Henle's loop limbs and blood through vasa recta capillaries. The descending limb is permeable to water (filtrate concentrates), while the ascending limb is impermeable to water but transports electrolytes (filtrate dilutes). NaCl and urea accumulate in the medullary interstitium, creating a gradient from 300 mOsmol/L in cortex to 1200 mOsmol/L in inner medulla. This gradient allows collecting duct to reabsorb water and concentrate urine to 4× the initial filtrate.
03What hormones regulate kidney function and how?
Antidiuretic hormone (ADH/vasopressin) released by hypothalamus promotes water reabsorption from tubule latter parts, concentrating urine and preventing diuresis. The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system activates when GFR drops: juxta glomerular cells release renin → converts angiotensinogen to angiotensin II → increases blood pressure and GFR, and triggers aldosterone release → reabsorbs Na+ and water. Atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) counteracts this by causing vasodilation to lower blood pressure, providing feedback regulation.
04Is the NCERT Class 11 Biology Chapter 16 PDF free to download?
Yes, NCERT textbooks including Class 11 Biology Chapter 16 are free to download. The official NCERT website and authorized educational platforms offer free PDFs of all NCERT textbooks for students.
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