Life Processes — Class 10 Science
"What separates a living organism from a stone? Six basic processes: nutrition, respiration, transport, excretion, growth, response."
1. About the Chapter
This is one of the LARGEST chapters in Class 10 Biology. Covers:
- Nutrition (autotrophic, heterotrophic)
- Respiration (aerobic, anaerobic)
- Transportation (blood, lymph in animals; xylem/phloem in plants)
- Excretion (kidneys, sweating)
- Plant systems (photosynthesis, transpiration)
Key Idea
Life processes = essential functions that keep an organism alive.
2. Six Life Processes
- Nutrition — getting food
- Respiration — releasing energy from food
- Transportation — moving materials within body
- Excretion — removing waste
- Growth — increasing size/cells
- Response — reacting to environment (Chapter 6)
This chapter covers 1-4. Chapter 6 covers 5-6.
3. NUTRITION
Modes of Nutrition
Autotrophic (self-made): plants, some bacteria
- Use sunlight + CO₂ + water to make food (photosynthesis)
Heterotrophic (others-made): animals, fungi, most bacteria
- Eat plants/animals/decomposing matter
Heterotrophic Types
- Holozoic: ingest, digest, absorb (humans, lions)
- Saprophytic: feed on dead/decaying matter (fungi)
- Parasitic: live on/inside host (tapeworms, malaria parasite)
Photosynthesis (Plant Nutrition)
Equation: 6CO₂ + 6H₂O → C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂ (Catalysed by CHLOROPHYLL, using SUNLIGHT)
Where: Chloroplasts of leaf cells (chlorophyll in stroma)
Steps:
- Absorption of LIGHT by chlorophyll
- Conversion of light energy to chemical energy
- Splitting of water (H₂O → H⁺ + OH⁻) — releases O₂
- Carbon dioxide reduction to form glucose
Stomata: tiny pores in leaves for CO₂ in, O₂ out, water vapour transpiration. Guarded by guard cells (open/close based on water).
Human Digestive System
Organs (in order):
- Mouth: chewing, salivary amylase (breaks starch to maltose)
- Oesophagus: tube to stomach (peristalsis)
- Stomach: HCl, pepsin (breaks proteins)
- Small intestine (main digestion):
- Bile from liver emulsifies fats
- Pancreatic juice (trypsin, amylase, lipase)
- Intestinal juice (final digestion)
- VILLI absorb nutrients into blood
- Large intestine: water absorption, waste storage
- Rectum and anus: excretion
Important Enzymes
- Amylase: starch → maltose (mouth, pancreas)
- Pepsin: proteins → peptides (stomach)
- Trypsin: peptides → amino acids (small intestine)
- Lipase: fats → fatty acids + glycerol (small intestine)
4. RESPIRATION
What is Respiration?
Breakdown of food (mainly glucose) to RELEASE ENERGY for life processes.
Cellular Respiration Equation
Aerobic: C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂ → 6CO₂ + 6H₂O + ENERGY (ATP)
Anaerobic (no oxygen): different products
- In muscles: C₆H₁₂O₆ → 2C₃H₆O₃ (lactic acid) + LITTLE energy
- In yeast: C₆H₁₂O₆ → 2C₂H₅OH + 2CO₂ (ethanol + CO₂) — used in bread, beer
Aerobic vs Anaerobic
- Aerobic: O₂ used. Full breakdown (CO₂ + H₂O). MORE energy.
- Anaerobic: No O₂. Partial breakdown (lactic acid or ethanol). LESS energy.
Human Respiratory System
- Nose: filters air, warms it
- Trachea: windpipe
- Bronchi: branches to each lung
- Bronchioles: smaller branches in lungs
- Alveoli: tiny air sacs (gas exchange happens here)
- Lungs: 300 million alveoli; huge surface area
Gas Exchange
At alveoli:
- O₂ diffuses INTO blood (low concentration in blood, high in alveoli)
- CO₂ diffuses OUT of blood (high in blood, low in alveoli)
Breathing Mechanism
- Inhalation: diaphragm contracts (flattens), ribs move up; chest expands; air in
- Exhalation: diaphragm relaxes (domes up), ribs move down; chest contracts; air out
Respiration in Plants
- Plants RESPIRE 24×7 (like animals)
- Day: photosynthesis dominates (releases O₂)
- Night: respiration only (uses O₂, releases CO₂)
- That's why people advise against sleeping under trees at night.
5. TRANSPORTATION
In Humans (Circulatory System)
Components:
- Heart: pump (4 chambers)
- Blood vessels: arteries (away from heart), veins (toward heart), capillaries (smallest)
- Blood: red cells (oxygen), white cells (immunity), platelets (clotting), plasma
Heart Chambers
- 2 Atria (upper): receive blood
- 2 Ventricles (lower): pump blood
Right side: receives deoxygenated blood from body, sends to lungs Left side: receives oxygenated blood from lungs, sends to body
Double Circulation
Blood passes through heart TWICE in one cycle:
- Pulmonary circulation: heart → lungs → heart
- Systemic circulation: heart → body → heart
This ensures EFFICIENT oxygen delivery.
Blood Components
- Plasma (55%): liquid; carries nutrients, hormones, waste
- RBC (Red Blood Cells): contain HAEMOGLOBIN (carries O₂); biconcave; no nucleus
- WBC (White Blood Cells): immunity
- Platelets: clotting (stop bleeding)
Lymph
A clear fluid that drains from tissues back to blood.
- Carries fats (from intestines)
- Cleans tissues
- Part of immune system
Plants: Xylem and Phloem
Xylem:
- Carries WATER + MINERALS from roots to leaves (UPWARD only)
- Tracheids and vessels (dead, hollow tubes)
- Driven by: ROOT PRESSURE + TRANSPIRATION PULL (most important)
Phloem:
- Carries FOOD (mainly sucrose) from leaves to all parts (UP, DOWN, BOTH directions)
- Sieve tubes (alive) and companion cells
- Driven by: TURGOR PRESSURE differences (osmosis)
Transpiration
Loss of water vapour through stomata in leaves.
- Cools the plant
- Creates UPWARD PULL for water in xylem
- Helps mineral transport
- Some water loss is necessary
6. EXCRETION
In Humans
Main organ: KIDNEYS (one pair)
Kidney Structure
- Bean-shaped, fist-sized
- Contains millions of NEPHRONS (functional units)
- Each nephron filters blood
Nephron Function
- Filtration: in glomerulus (cluster of capillaries inside Bowman's capsule)
- Reabsorption: water, glucose, salts reabsorbed in tubule
- Secretion: more waste added
- Excretion: final urine
Urinary System
- 2 kidneys
- 2 ureters (kidney to bladder)
- 1 bladder (storage)
- 1 urethra (out)
Composition of Urine
- 95% water
- 2.5% urea
- 2.5% salts, ions, etc.
Artificial Kidney (Dialysis)
For patients with kidney failure. Machine filters blood like a kidney.
Plant Excretion
- Plants don't have specialised excretory organs
- Excess water via transpiration
- Some waste stored in vacuoles, dropped with leaves (autumn)
- Resins, gums, latex are stored wastes
7. Worked Examples
Example 1: Photosynthesis
Write the equation for photosynthesis.
- 6CO₂ + 6H₂O → C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂ (in presence of sunlight and chlorophyll)
Example 2: Aerobic vs Anaerobic
Compare aerobic and anaerobic respiration.
- Aerobic: O₂ used; CO₂ + H₂O + LOTS energy; e.g., in human cells
- Anaerobic: No O₂; lactic acid (muscles) or ethanol (yeast); LITTLE energy
Example 3: Why Double Circulation?
Why is double circulation important?
- Keeps oxygen-rich and oxygen-poor blood SEPARATE.
- Allows EFFICIENT oxygen delivery throughout body.
- Birds and mammals have it; reptiles/amphibians have partial division.
Example 4: Nephron Steps
What happens in a nephron?
-
- Filtration (glomerulus)
-
- Reabsorption (water, glucose)
-
- Secretion (more waste)
-
- Excretion (urine)
8. Common Mistakes
-
Confusing inhalation and exhalation
- INHALE: diaphragm FLATTENS, chest EXPANDS, air IN
- EXHALE: diaphragm DOMES UP, chest CONTRACTS, air OUT
-
Wrong gas direction
- O₂ goes INTO blood from alveoli; CO₂ goes OUT of blood.
-
Plants photosynthesise only
- Plants RESPIRE too (24×7). Photosynthesis only in light.
-
Veins always carry deoxygenated blood
- GENERALLY YES, EXCEPT pulmonary vein (lungs to heart, oxygenated!).
-
All food gets digested in stomach
- Most digestion happens in SMALL INTESTINE.
9. Indian Context
Ayurveda
- Ancient Indian medicine emphasises digestion, food
- Charaka Samhita describes anatomy/physiology
- Sushruta Samhita: surgery
Modern Indian Medicine
- AIIMS (multiple centres) world-class
- Indian Heart Hospital network
- Manipal, Fortis, Apollo hospitals
- Indian doctors lead globally
Health Challenges in India
- Heart disease (#1 killer)
- Diabetes (~80 million Indians)
- Kidney disease
- Respiratory issues (air pollution)
10. Conclusion
Life Processes is the HEART of Class 10 Biology:
- Nutrition (autotrophic photosynthesis, holozoic digestion)
- Respiration (aerobic for energy)
- Transportation (heart, blood, xylem, phloem)
- Excretion (kidneys, nephrons)
Master:
- Photosynthesis equation
- Respiratory and circulatory systems
- Kidney structure and function
- Differences in plants vs animals
Practice 20+ problems. This is HIGH-MARK chapter (~10-12 marks).
Every breath, every heartbeat, every digestion — life processes in action.
