Action potential: a small electrical event which is how information is passed from neuron to neuron.
Atom: the smallest piece of an element that still has the chemical properties of the whole element.
Filament: a thin piece of an object or fiber.
Hormone: a chemical message released by cells into the body that affects other cells in the body.
Ion: an atom or molecule that does not have the same number of electrons as it has protons. This gives the atom or molecule a negative or positive charge... more
Ion gate: a small hole (pore) in a cell membrane that lets certain ions in and out....more
Sedentary: fairly inactive.
Tissue: A group of similar cells that do a specific job together. Organs are made of groups of tissues.
The neon green caterpillar inches across the leaf, curling and stretching the long middle of its body to push and pull the rest along. With each large step—push and pull, push and pull—it uses thousands of tiny muscles to move its body. Once it reaches the edge of the leaf, it stops and uses hundreds of different muscles to begin eating.
For most animals, movement is a necessity. Moving can protect you from predators, let you find, catch, or eat food, and let you reproduce. But how do different animals move, exactly? Well, to start with, some don’t.
Some animals, such as sea sponges, don’t have muscles. Once they begin to grow in one spot on the seafloor, they don’t actually go anywhere else—they have a sedentary lifestyle. They still have movement though, if you look close enough.
Cells can move some sea sponges very tiny distances over the seafloor and other cells open or close pores that let in water. They also have cells with flagella that can whip through the water and cause water movement. As water moves across a sea sponge’s body, cells are also responsible for capturing food as it passes by.
Most other animals have muscles. Whether you look at tiny zooplankton jumping through the ocean current, slow-moving snails laying eggs, or a hummingbird flying backwards, most animals rely on muscle movement to live.
There are several types of muscles, but they can all be divided into two categories - either striated (striped) or smooth. The skeletal muscles you use to walk, chew food, or to follow the line of this sentence with your eyes are striated. Your heart is made of cardiac muscle, which is also striated. Animals that don’t have a skeleton also have some striated muscles. Insects use them to fly, slugs to crawl, and zooplankton to swim through the water.
Striated muscles are bundles of muscle tissue that look banded because of the repeating units that make the muscle. Think about a stack of Legos. In between each Lego is a line, where it connects to the next Lego. You can think of striated muscles in the same way… they are striped because they are made of repeating units.
The other type of muscle is smooth muscle, which is not striated. All smooth muscle is involuntary, meaning we cannot simply decide to make it move. (Some striated muscle, like cardiac muscle, is also involuntary.) It moves and works without any conscious effort from us. Smooth muscle is in your bladder, your digestive system, and it even controls the pupils in your eyes.
Whether we choose to move a muscle, or it moves on its own, how do muscles work? Some smooth muscle can contract in response to being stretched. Some can also contract in response to some chemicals, like hormones or oxygen levels. But most muscles (and all striated muscles) are controlled by nerves.
Nerve signals are actually made up of tiny charged atoms moving in and out of a cell. As a signal moves down a nerve cell, imagine small doors in the cell opening, and thousands of tiny atoms start rushing in while others rush out. The atoms rushing in and out of nerves are sodium and potassium ions, which is part of why these chemicals are important to have in your diet.
When this action potential finally reaches a striated muscle cell, calcium flow into the end of the nerve causes it to release a special chemical, acetylcholine. This chemical crosses over to the muscle fiber and stimulates it. The whole process is called excitation, and opens more sodium and potassium doors (called ion gates), setting off an action potential within the muscle cell.
Once excited, long chains of proteins called myofilaments are activated. By making small movements, some of these protein chains “walk” down other chains, to move the filaments along one another. Happening quickly, across many filaments in a muscle cell, that cell shortens, or “contracts.” When the muscle fibers relax, the filaments return to their original positions, and the muscle relaxes.
The majority of animals use muscles to move. This is true whether they have an internal skeleton like we do, an exoskeleton like insects, or no hard skeleton at all. Some animals with no skeleton and some with an exoskeleton use fluid as an extra form of support. Though it is not rigid, it is sometimes called a hydrostatic skeleton, where hydro- means water (or fluid) and -static means stable or fixed (not moving). By flexing muscles near or around fluid pockets in the body, that fluid can be forced into different areas, causing movement.
The legs of spiders move with the help of a hydrostatic skeleton. They use muscles to bend their legs in, but they pressurize the legs with fluid to move them out. Even when animals are at rest, most of the time, their bodies are in constant movement, as they eat, digest, and breathe. And this is due to the magic of a very special tissue type—muscles.
Additional images via Wikimedia Commons. Hibernating bats image by US Fish and Wildlife.
Karla Moeller, Pierce Hutton. (2018, October 01). Muscles and Movement. ASU - Ask A Biologist. Retrieved November 29, 2024 from https://askabiologist.asu.edu/musculoskeletal-system
Karla Moeller, Pierce Hutton. "Muscles and Movement". ASU - Ask A Biologist. 01 October, 2018. https://askabiologist.asu.edu/musculoskeletal-system
Karla Moeller, Pierce Hutton. "Muscles and Movement". ASU - Ask A Biologist. 01 Oct 2018. ASU - Ask A Biologist, Web. 29 Nov 2024. https://askabiologist.asu.edu/musculoskeletal-system
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