What is surface area to volume ratio biology

Understanding:

•  Surface area to volume ratio is important in the limitation of cell size

    
Cells need to produce chemical energy (via metabolism) to survive and this requires the exchange of materials with the environment

  • The rate of metabolism of a cell is a function of its mass / volume  (larger cells need more energy to sustain essential functions)
  • The rate of material exchange is a function of its surface area  (large membrane surface equates to more material movement)

As a cell grows, volume (units3) increases faster than surface area (units2), leading to a decreased SA:Vol ratio

  • If metabolic rate exceeds the rate of exchange of vital materials and wastes (low SA:Vol ratio), the cell will eventually die
  • Hence growing cells tend to divide and remain small in order to maintain a high SA:Vol ratio suitable for survival

Overview of Surface Area to Volume Ratio



Increasing SA:Vol Ratio

Cells and tissues that are specialised for gas or material exchanges will increase their surface area to optimise material transfer

  • Intestinal tissue of the digestive tract may form a ruffled structure (villi) to increase the surface area of the inner lining
  • Alveoli within the lungs have membranous extensions called microvilli, which function to increase the total membrane surface

  • Looking for a student learning guide? It’s on the main menu for your course. Use the “Courses” menu above.
  • Click for the handout I use when I do this lab with my students.
  • If you’ve already watched the video, click here, or scroll down below the video to start interacting.

1. Surface Area Volume Ratios and Life: The Basic Idea

For the most part, life occurs on a very small scale. Life is based on cells, and cells (with a few exceptions like egg cells) are small. How small? A eukaryotic cell is typically about 30 micrometers in diameter. That’s 30 millionths of a meter. A prokaryotic cell (the type of cell found in bacteria) can be anywhere from 300 times smaller to five times smaller. Why are cells, the basic units of life, so small?

The answer lies in the relationship between a cell’s surface area and its volume. Surface area is the amount of surface an object has.

  • For a cube, the formula for area is (length of a side)2 x 6.
  • For a sphere, the formula for area is 4 Π r2

Volume is the amount of space inside something.

  • For a cube, the formula for volume is (length of a side)3.
  • For a sphere, the formula is 4/3 Π r3

The surface area to volume ratio is an object’s surface area divided by its volume.  So, for a cube that’s one centimeter on a side,

  • the surface area is 6cm2 (1cm x 1cm x 6),
  • the volume is 1 cm3 (1cm x 1cm x 1cm), and
  • the surface area to volume ratio is 6 units of surface: 1 unit of volume

As you can see from the formulas, surface area is a square function (side 2 x 6), while volume is a cubic function (side)3. As a result, as the size of an object increases, its ratio of surface area to volume decreases. Conversely, as the size of an object decreases, its ratio of surface area to volume increases.

Figure 1

Study the table above, which shows the area, volume, and surface area: volume ratio for a variety of cubes. Note that in a cube that’s 0.1cm on a side the surface area: volume ratio is 60:1. This ratio falls to 0.6:1 in a cube that’s 10cm on a side.

This becomes even clearer in the chart below.

Figure 2

But how does this relate to the size of cells? Cells are constantly exchanging substances with their environment, and this exchange largely happens by the diffusion of materials through the cell membrane, the outer boundary of a cell. Cells need to be small so that they have enough surface for molecules to be able to diffuse in and out. On a much larger scale, you can see this in the picture below.

Figure 3

This picture is a still from the main demonstration shown in the Surface Area, Volume, and Life video. The cubes are made of agar, a seaweed extract. The agar contains a pH indicator, and the cubes are fuchsia (dark pink) on the inside because their initial pH is basic. When placed in vinegar (an acid), the vinegar diffuses into the cubes. As the vinegar diffuses in, the pH indicator changes from fuchsia to white.

This is what the cubes look like after six minutes. Note that 100% of the smallest cube’s volume has been reached by the vinegar, while only 19% of the largest video is reached by diffusion. The basic idea: small size results in a high surface area to volume ratio, which enhances diffusion. And that’s why cells are small.

Figure 4

The same principle explains a variety of biological phenomena. Why do elephants have big ears? Because elephants are huge, their bodies have a very low surface area to volume ratio. This makes it very difficult for heat to diffuse away from the elephant’s body. To compensate, elephants have evolved huge, flat ears. The ears, being flat, increase the elephant’s surface area, while barely increasing the volume. Blood in the ears can release heat into the environment.

A marine flatworm: no lungs, no heart.

Flattening out structures is an adaptation that also explains why flatworms can survive without any specialized system for distributing oxygen or carbon dioxide throughout their bodies. Because they’re flat, they have a very high surface area to volume ratio. This allows oxygen to diffuse from water directly to their body cells, and for carbon dioxide to diffuse from their body cells back out to the surrounding environment.

Figure 5: Whales have a relatively low surface area to volume ratio

Reducing the surface area to volume ratio can also be an adaptive strategy. Think about marine mammals. None of them are very small (the size of mice or even rats). The smallest marine mammals are otters, and it’s no coincidence that most marine mammals are relatively large (think of walruses, dolphins, manatees, etc.). One marine mammal, the blue whale, is the largest animal ever to have evolved. Why are marine mammals large? It’s instructive to compare marine mammals with elephants. Whereas elephants evolved huge ears as a way to enhance heat diffusion by increasing their surface area to volume ratio, marine mammals have evolved large sizes as a way of decreasing their surface area to volume ratio, as a way of decreasing heat loss. Look again at figure 3 above. The large cube, with its low surface area to volume ratio, has relatively little diffusion happening over time. And in terms of heat exchange, that’s advantageous for mammals living in cool ocean water. In other words, just by being large, marine mammals were able to evolve a strategy that enabled them to diminish heat loss.

2. Checking Understanding

3. Interactive Reading: Applying the surface area to volume ratio.

Next steps

  1. Introduction to Cells (next tutorial in this series)
  2. Cell Structure and Function Main Menu

Why is surface area to volume ratio important in biology?

Smaller single-celled organisms have a high surface area to volume ratio, which allows them to rely on oxygen and material diffusing into the cell (and wastes diffusing out) in order to survive. The higher the surface area to volume ratio they have, the more effective this process can be.

What is the surface

The ratio is the surface area divided by the volume. This indicates how much surface area is available compared to how big the cell is. If the surface area to volume ratio is small, the cell is very big. If the ratio is big, the surface area is greater than the volume, and the cell is small.

What are the ratios between surface area and volume?

It gives the proportion of surface area per unit volume of the object (e.g., sphere, cylinder, etc.). Therefore, the formula to calculate surface area to volume ratio is: SA/VOL = surface area (x2) / volume (x3) SA/VOL = x-1 , where x is the unit of measurement.

What is surface area to volume ratio in animals?

The surface-area-to-volume ratio is also called the surface-to-volume ratio. Animals generate heat internally in proportion to their volume. The larger the volume of the animal the more heat it can produce. Animals lose heat externally in proportion to their surface area.

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