By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Describe the types, locations, and functions of epithelial tissue
  • 2Classify connective tissues and their matrices
  • 3Compare skeletal, smooth, and cardiac muscle
  • 4Describe neuron structure and types
  • 5Explain the morphology and organ systems of the cockroach
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Why this chapter matters
Animal bodies are organised from cells into tissues, organs, and systems. Mastering the four basic animal tissues and the cockroach as a model organism is the foundation for animal physiology and human biology, and a steady source of NEET questions.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Structural Organisation in Animals

'The body of an animal is a community of cells organised into tissues, organs, and organ systems.' — Animal Physiology

1. Chapter Overview

Just as plants have tissues and tissue systems, animals are organised into TISSUES, ORGANS, and ORGAN SYSTEMS. This chapter covers the FOUR BASIC TISSUES of animals — EPITHELIAL, CONNECTIVE, MUSCULAR, and NERVOUS — their TYPES, STRUCTURE, and FUNCTION. It also includes a DETAILED study of the COCKROACH as a representative animal to illustrate how tissues are ORGANISED into systems.


2. Epithelial Tissue

Characteristics

  • Covers BODY surfaces and lines CAVITIES
  • Cells are TIGHTLY PACKED (minimal intercellular matrix)
  • BASEMENT MEMBRANE (separates epithelium from underlying connective tissue)
  • AVASCULAR (no blood vessels; nutrients from diffusion)
  • REGENERATES rapidly

Classification

Based on Number of Layers

  • Simple epithelium: SINGLE layer of cells (function: absorption, secretion, filtration)
  • Stratified epithelium: MULTIPLE layers (function: protection)

Based on Cell Shape

TypeShapeLocationFunction
SquamousFlat, thinBlood vessels, lung alveoliDiffusion, filtration
CuboidalCube-shapedKidney tubules, glandsSecretion, absorption
ColumnarTall, columnStomach, intestineSecretion, absorption
Ciliated columnarWith CILIARespiratory tract, oviductMove mucus/egg
PseudostratifiedAppears layeredTracheaProtection + secretion

Glandular Epithelium

  • Unicellular glands: Goblet cells (secrete mucus)
  • Multicellular glands: Salivary glands, sweat glands

3. Connective Tissue (MOST ABUNDANT)

Characteristics

  • CELLS scattered in an EXTRACELLULAR MATRIX (fibres + ground substance)
  • Matrix determines the PROPERTIES of the tissue
  • GOOD blood supply (except cartilage and tendons)

Types of Connective Tissue

TypeMatrixCellsLocationFunction
Loose (Areolar)Loose fibres (collagen, elastin)Fibroblasts, macrophagesUnder skin, between organsFILLER, binds organs
AdiposeFat cellsAdipocytesUnder skin, around organsSTORAGE (fat), insulation
Dense regularParallel collagen fibresFibroblastsTendons, ligamentsSTRONG connection
Dense irregularRandom collagen fibresFibroblastsDermis of skinSTRENGTH (all directions)
CartilageFirm, flexible; chondrinChondrocytesNose, ears, jointsSMOOTH surface, support
BoneHARD, mineralised (Ca, P)OsteocytesSkeletonSUPPORT, protection
Blood (Fluid CT)PLASMA (liquid)RBC, WBC, plateletsBlood vesselsTRANSPORT

Special Connective Tissues

  • Tendon: Cord-like, connects MUSCLE to BONE (dense regular)
  • Ligament: Elastic, connects BONE to BONE

4. Muscular Tissue

Characteristics

  • CONTRACTILE cells (myofibrils — actin + myosin)
  • Excitability, contractility, extensibility, elasticity
TypeStructureNucleiControlLocation
Skeletal (Striated, Voluntary)Long, cylindrical, STRIATED (sarcomeres)MULTI-nucleate (peripheral)VoluntarYAttached to bones
Smooth (Non-striated, Involuntary)Spindle-shaped, NO striationsSINGLE nucleus (central)INVOLUNTARyWalls of organs, blood vessels
CardiacBranched, STRIATED, INTERCALATED DISCSSINGLE or BINUCLEATEINVOLUNTARy (myogenic)Heart wall (myocardium)

5. Nervous Tissue

  • Neuron: Structural and functional UNIT
    • Dendrites: RECEIVE signals
    • Cell body (Soma): Contains NUCLEUS
    • Axon: TRANSMITS impulses AWAY
    • Synapse: Junction between neurons

Types of Neurons

  • Unipolar: Single process (embryonic)
  • Bipolar: One axon + one dendrite (retina, ear)
  • Multipolar: ONE axon + MANY dendrites (MOST common in brain/spinal cord)

Neuroglial Cells

  • SUPPORT, PROTECT, and NOURISH neurons
  • Outnumber neurons 10:1

6. Cockroach (Periplaneta americana) — Morphology

Classification

  • Phylum: Arthropoda; Class: Insecta; Order: Blattodea

External Features

  • Body: Elongated, FLATTENED, SEGMENTED
  • Colour: Brown/Brownish-black
  • Size: 34-53 mm
  • Three Body Regions: HEAD, THORAX, ABDOMEN
  • Head: Compound eyes, antenna (sensory), mouthparts (chewing/biting)
  • Thorax: 3 segments (pro, meso, meta); 2 PAIRS of wings + 3 PAIRS of jointed legs
  • Abdomen: 10 segments, anal cerci (sensory)

7. Cockroach — Internal Systems

Digestive System

  • Foregut: Mouth → oesophagus → crop (storage) → gizzard (grinding)
  • Midgut: Hepatic caecae (secrete digestive enzymes)
  • Hindgut: Ileum, colon, rectum → reabsorption of water

Circulatory System

  • OPEN type (blood = HAEMOLYMPH)
  • Heart: Tubular, 13 chambers with OSTIA
  • Haemolymph colourless (NO haemoglobin)

Respiratory System

  • TRACHEAL system: Network of tubes (tracheae)
  • Spiracles: 10 pairs (openings on body surface)
  • Direct O₂ delivery to cells (EFICIENT)

Excretory System

  • Malpighian tubules: 100-150, attached at junction of midgut and hindgut

Nervous System

  • Ventral nerve cord: Ganglia in each segment
  • Sense organs: Compound eyes, antenna, maxillary palps, cerci

Reproductive System

  • Male: Testes → seminal vesicles → ejaculatory duct → phallomere
  • Female: Ovaries → oviduct → vagina → genital pouch

8. Common Mistakes

  1. Blood is a CONNECTIVE tissue: Even though it's liquid, it fits the definition (cells in matrix)
  2. Cardiac muscle is STRIATED but INVOLUNTARY: The only muscle with this combination
  3. Cartilage is AVASCULAR: That is why cartilage injuries HEAL SLOWLY
  4. Cockroach heart is TUBULAR, not chambered like the human heart: Open circulation
  5. Epithelial tissue is AVASCULAR and relies on DIFFUSION from underlying connective tissue

9. CBSE Exam Focus

  1. Epithelial tissue — types, locations, functions (3/5-mark)
  2. Connective tissue — classification and features (5-mark)
  3. Muscle tissue — types and comparison (3-mark)
  4. Cockroach — digestive and respiratory systems (5-mark)
  5. Neuron structure and function (3-mark)

10. Self-Test (5+ Q&A)

Q1: What are intercalated discs? Where are they found? A: INTERCALATED DISCS are specialised junctions between CARDIAC muscle cells. They connect cells mechanically and electrically (gap junctions), enabling SYNCHRONISED contraction.

Q2: Why is blood considered a connective tissue? A: Blood has CELLS (RBC, WBC) suspended in a FLUID MATRIX (plasma) — fitting the definition of connective tissue (cells separated by extracellular matrix). It CONNECTS different parts of the body through transport.

Q3: Describe the respiratory system of cockroach. A: TRACHEAL system — air enters through 10 PAIRS OF SPIRACLES, passes through tracheae and tracheoles, delivering O₂ DIRECTLY to tissues. NO blood involvement in gas transport.

Q4: Differentiate between tendon and ligament. A: Tendon: Connects MUSCLE to BONE; DENSE REGULAR connective tissue; STRONG and INELASTIC. Ligament: Connects BONE to BONE; ELASTIC fibres; ALLOWS flexibility at joints.

Q5: How many Malpighian tubules does a cockroach have and what is their function? A: 100-150 Malpighian tubules. They EXCRETE nitrogenous waste (mainly uric acid) from haemolymph into the hindgut — function as the KIDNEY equivalent.


11. Conclusion

Animal tissues are ORGANISED in a hierarchy: cells → tissues → organs → systems. The FOUR tissues coordinate to perform all body functions. Epithelial tissue provides BARRIERS. Connective tissue PROVIDES framework and transport. Muscular tissue ENABLES movement. Nervous tissue COORDINATES responses. The cockroach is an EXCELLENT model for understanding how these tissues integrate into functioning organ systems. This knowledge is the FOUNDATION for understanding animal physiology and human biology.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Four animal tissues
Epithelial, connective, muscular, nervous
The basic tissue types that build all organs.
Muscle comparison
Skeletal (striated, voluntary); smooth (non-striated, involuntary); cardiac (striated, involuntary)
Cardiac muscle is the only striated involuntary muscle.
Cockroach systems
Open circulation, tracheal respiration, Malpighian tubules for excretion
Periplaneta americana, Class Insecta.
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Not recognising blood as connective tissue
Blood is fluid connective tissue -- cells (RBC, WBC, platelets) suspended in a plasma matrix.
WATCH OUT
Assuming all striated muscle is voluntary
Cardiac muscle is striated but involuntary (myogenic), the only such combination.
WATCH OUT
Thinking cartilage has a rich blood supply
Cartilage is avascular, which is why cartilage injuries heal slowly.
WATCH OUT
Treating epithelium as vascular
Epithelial tissue is avascular and gets nutrients by diffusion from the underlying connective tissue.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1MEDIUM· Muscle
What are intercalated discs and where are they found?
Show solution
Intercalated discs are specialised junctions between cardiac muscle cells. They connect the cells mechanically and electrically (via gap junctions), allowing synchronised contraction of the heart.
Q2MEDIUM· Connective Tissue
Why is blood considered a connective tissue?
Show solution
Blood consists of cells (RBCs, WBCs, platelets) suspended in a fluid extracellular matrix (plasma), which fits the definition of connective tissue. It also connects body parts by transporting materials between them.
Q3MEDIUM· Cockroach
Describe the respiratory system of the cockroach.
Show solution
The cockroach has a tracheal system. Air enters through 10 pairs of spiracles and passes through branching tracheae and fine tracheoles that deliver oxygen directly to the tissues. The haemolymph plays no role in gas transport.
Q4EASY· Compare
Differentiate between a tendon and a ligament.
Show solution
A tendon (dense regular connective tissue) connects muscle to bone and is strong and inelastic. A ligament connects bone to bone and is more elastic, allowing flexibility at joints.
Q5EASY· Cockroach
How many Malpighian tubules does a cockroach have and what is their function?
Show solution
A cockroach has about 100-150 Malpighian tubules. They excrete nitrogenous waste (mainly uric acid) from the haemolymph into the hindgut, functioning like kidneys.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Four animal tissues: epithelial, connective, muscular, nervous.
  • Epithelium: avascular, on a basement membrane; simple vs stratified; squamous/cuboidal/columnar.
  • Connective tissue is the most abundant; includes areolar, adipose, cartilage, bone, blood.
  • Tendon connects muscle to bone; ligament connects bone to bone.
  • Muscle: skeletal (striated, voluntary), smooth (involuntary), cardiac (striated, involuntary).
  • Neuron: dendrites receive, axon transmits; multipolar neurons are most common.
  • Cockroach: open circulation (haemolymph), tracheal respiration (spiracles), Malpighian tubules.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 5-7 marks across the chapter

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Connective / epithelial tissue3-51Classification, structure, and function
Cockroach systems3-51Digestive, respiratory, excretory systems
Muscle / nervous tissue2-31Muscle comparison and neuron structure
Prep strategy
  • Tabulate the four tissues with locations and functions
  • Memorise the muscle comparison table
  • Learn the cockroach organ systems with labelled diagrams
  • Note exceptions like blood, cardiac muscle, cartilage

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Medicine and histology

Identifying tissue types under the microscope is fundamental to diagnosing diseases and cancers.

Sports and physiology

Understanding muscle types underlies training, rehabilitation, and cardiac health.

Pest control

Knowing cockroach anatomy and physiology helps design effective and targeted pest-control methods.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Use comparison tables for tissues and muscles
  2. Draw and label the neuron and cockroach systems
  3. State locations alongside functions for tissues
  4. Highlight key exceptions (blood, cardiac muscle, cartilage)

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Relate epithelial cell junctions (tight, gap, desmosome) to tissue function.
  • Compare excretory strategies (ammonotelic, ureotelic, uricotelic) across animals.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 11 Biology examHigh
NEET BiologyHigh

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Cardiac muscle is rich in mitochondria and depends on aerobic respiration, so it produces little lactic acid. Its cells are joined by intercalated discs with gap junctions that allow rhythmic, coordinated contraction, and it has built-in rest between beats. These features, along with a continuous oxygen supply, let the heart contract continuously throughout life without the fatigue that affects voluntary skeletal muscle.

The cockroach (Periplaneta americana) has a clearly segmented body divided into head, thorax, and abdomen, with well-developed organ systems that are easy to dissect and observe -- an open circulatory system, a tracheal respiratory system, Malpighian tubules for excretion, and a ventral nerve cord. Because it is large, hardy, and easily available, it conveniently illustrates how the four basic tissues are organised into functioning systems.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 29 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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