TermDefinition
PlasmaThe liquid portion of blood, consisting mainly of water, proteins, electrolytes, nutrients, hormones, and waste products.
ErythrocyteRed blood cell containing haemoglobin, specialised for oxygen and carbon dioxide transport.
LeukocyteWhite blood cell involved in immune defence, including phagocytosis and antibody production.
Platelet (Thrombocyte)Cell fragment involved in blood clotting and wound repair.
HaemostasisThe process of stopping bleeding, involving vasoconstriction, platelet plug formation, and coagulation cascade.
FibrinInsoluble protein fibres formed during clotting that stabilise the platelet plug.
ImmunoglobulinAntibody protein produced by B cells, binding specifically to antigens for immune defence.

Blood is a specialised connective tissue that serves as the main transport medium in animals with closed circulatory systems. It delivers oxygen, nutrients, and hormones to cells, removes metabolic wastes, and plays a central role in immunity, pH balance, and temperature regulation. Blood composition reflects an organism’s physiology and environmental adaptations, and understanding its components is vital in both medical and ecological contexts.

❀️ CAS Link: Partner with a local blood donation campaign to create an educational display on blood components and their functions, encouraging community participation.

  • Composition β€” ~90% water, with dissolved salts, proteins, nutrients, hormones, and waste products.
  • Functions β€” Acts as a transport medium for glucose, amino acids, fatty acids, hormones, COβ‚‚ (as bicarbonate), and urea.
  • Plasma Proteins β€” Albumin maintains osmotic pressure; fibrinogen involved in clotting; globulins (including immunoglobulins) play immune roles.

🧠 Examiner Tip: When explaining plasma functions, explicitly link each dissolved component to its transport or homeostatic role.

  • Structure β€” Biconcave disc shape increases surface area for gas exchange; no nucleus or mitochondria to maximise haemoglobin content.
  • Function β€” Transport oxygen bound to haemoglobin; transport some COβ‚‚ bound to haemoglobin or dissolved in plasma.
  • Lifespan β€” ~120 days, destroyed in spleen/liver; iron recycled for new haemoglobin synthesis.

🌍 Real-World Connection: Athletes training at high altitudes stimulate increased erythrocyte production to improve oxygen delivery.

  • Granulocytes β€” Neutrophils (phagocytosis of bacteria), eosinophils (defend against parasites), basophils (release histamine in inflammation).
  • Agranulocytes β€” Lymphocytes (B and T cells for adaptive immunity), monocytes (differentiate into macrophages for phagocytosis).
  • Numbers rise during infection; low counts can indicate immune suppression.

πŸ” TOK Perspective: The classification of immunity as β€œinnate” vs. β€œadaptive” is a human framework that may oversimplify the integrated nature of immune responses.

  • Structure β€” Small, anucleate cell fragments derived from megakaryocytes.
  • Clotting Process:
  • Vessel injury triggers platelet adhesion and aggregation β†’ platelet plug.
  • Clotting factors activate thrombin.
  • Thrombin converts fibrinogen β†’ fibrin, forming a mesh that stabilises the clot.
  • Clot retraction and repair occur as fibrin is broken down after healing.

βš—οΈ IA Tips & Guidance: An IA could compare clotting times under different conditions (e.g., temperature, calcium concentration) to investigate enzyme-mediated processes in blood coagulation.

  • Oxygen β€” Bound to haemoglobin in erythrocytes; loading in lungs, unloading in tissues (Bohr effect in active tissues).
  • Carbon Dioxide β€” Mostly as bicarbonate ions in plasma, some bound to haemoglobin, small amount dissolved.
  • Nutrients β€” Absorbed in intestines, transported in plasma to cells for metabolism or storage.

πŸ“ Paper 2: Data Response Tip: When explaining the hydrothermal vent hypothesis, always include energy source, protection from UV, and chemical gradients for full marks

  • Innate Immunity β€” Non-specific; includes skin barrier, phagocytosis, inflammation.
  • Adaptive Immunity β€” Specific; B lymphocytes produce antibodies, T lymphocytes target infected cells.
  • Memory cells ensure faster, stronger secondary responses.
  • Temperature Regulation β€” Redistribution of blood flow to skin or internal organs.
  • pH Buffering β€” Plasma proteins and bicarbonate buffer system maintain pH near 7.4.
  • Osmoregulation β€” Plasma proteins help maintain water balance between blood and tissues.