Hemolymph

Hemolymph

Hemolymph or haemolymph is the blood analogue used by all arthropods and most mollusks that have an open circulatory system.In these animals there is no distinction between blood and interstitial fluid. The liquid fills all of the interior (the hemocoel) of the body and surrounds all cells.

Muscular movements by the animal during locomotion can facilitate hemolymph movement, but diverting flow from one area to another is limited. When the heart relaxes, blood is drawn back toward the heart through open-ended pores (ostia).

Hemolymph is composed of water, inorganic salts (mostly Na+, Cl-, K+, Mg2+, and Ca2+), and organic compounds (mostly carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids). The primary oxygen transporter molecule is hemocyanin.

There are free-floating cells, the hemocytes, within the hemolymph. They play a role in the arthropod immune system.

The volume of hemolymph needed for such a system is kept to a minimum by a reduction in the size of the body cavity. The hemocoel is divided into chambers called sinuses.

In the grasshopper, the closed portion of the system consists of tubular hearts and an aorta running along the dorsal side of the insect. The hearts pump hemolymph into the sinuses of the hemocoel where exchanges of materials take place.

Coordinated movements of the body muscles gradually bring the hemolymph back to the dorsal sinus surrounding the hearts. Between contractions, tiny valves in the wall of the hearts open and allow hemolymph to enter.

This "open" system might appear to be inefficient compared to closed circulatory systems like those possessed by mammals, but the two have very different demands being placed on them. In vertebrates, the circulatory system is responsible for transporting oxygen to all the tissues and removing carbon dioxide from them. It is this requirement that establishes the level of performance demanded of the system. The efficiency of the vertebrate system is far greater than is needed for transporting nutrients, hormones, and so on, whereas in insects, exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide occurs in the tracheal system. Hemolymph plays no part in the process in most insects. In a few insects living in low-oxygen environments, there are hemoglobin-like molecules that bind oxygen and transport it to the tissues. Therefore, the demands placed upon the system are much lower. Some arthropods and most molluscs possess the copper-containing hemocyanin, however, for oxygen transport.

External links

Boston Globe article on hemolymph: [http://www.boston.com/news/globe/health_science/articles/2005/10/17/do_insects_have_blood/]


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • hemolymph — hemolymph. См. гемолимфа. (Источник: «Англо русский толковый словарь генетических терминов». Арефьев В.А., Лисовенко Л.А., Москва: Изд во ВНИРО, 1995 г.) …   Молекулярная биология и генетика. Толковый словарь.

  • hemolymph — [hē′mə limf΄] n. [ HEMO + LYMPH] the circulating fluid in open tissue spaces of invertebrates: it may act as blood, as in arthropods, or be in addition to blood, as in earthworms …   English World dictionary

  • hemolymph node — n any of several small chiefly retroperitoneal nodes of tissue resembling lymph nodes but having the lymph spaces replaced in whole or in part by blood sinuses called also hemal node …   Medical dictionary

  • hemolymph glands — 1. hemal nodes. 2. hemolymph nodes (def. 2) …   Medical dictionary

  • hemolymph nodes — 1. hemal n s. 2. special types of hemal nodes found in the pig, having characteristics midway between those of ordinary lymph nodes and typical hemal nodes, containing both blood and lymphatic vessels, the contents of both of which mix in the… …   Medical dictionary

  • hemolymph gland — noun or hemolymph node : any of several small chiefly retroperitoneal nodes of tissue resembling lymph nodes but having the lymph spaces replaced in whole or in part by blood sinuses …   Useful english dictionary

  • hemolymph node — noun see hemolymph gland …   Useful english dictionary

  • hemolymph — noun Date: 1885 the circulatory fluid of various invertebrate animals that is functionally comparable to the blood and lymph of vertebrates …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • hemolymph — n. [Gr. haima, blood; L. lympha, water] 1. (ARTHROPODA) Fluid within the hemocoel. 2. (NEMATA) The pseudocoelomic fluid …   Dictionary of invertebrate zoology

  • hemolymph — hemolymphatic /hee moh lim fat ik, hem oh /, adj. /hee meuh limf , hem euh /, n. Anat. a fluid in the body cavities and tissues of invertebrates, in arthropods functioning as blood and in some other invertebrates functioning as lymph. [1880 85;… …   Universalium

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