what might happen if the human body did not have specialized cells tissue organs and organ systems to maintain homeostasis
The specialisation of cells is paramount to having a functional multicellular organism. If the body didn't specialise then it wouldn't be an organism; it would just be a colony of cells much like those that bacteria and other single celled organisms form.
what might happen if the human body did not have specialized cells tissue organs and organ systems to maintain homeostasis
it wouldnt be abble to live because the organ system helps you breath too
It doesn't - unless the cardiac output also goes up. Ideally these should happen simultaneously, but in humans it often does not.
The state of homeostasis is very important for the body. All the chemical reactions and the metabolic processes are carried it perfectly if homeostasis is maintained. The disturbance in the homeostasis invites the diseases. Lack of enthusiasm and fatigue may happen. You would become overheated and if you didn't receive medical attention promptly, you would die.
if these tissues were in injured or disease ,What do you think will happen to the organism?
If homeostasis would stop or be interrupted, the system would no longer be stable or constant. Your body temperature could fall or rise drastically, very quickly.
If a cell is disturbed the cell can die.Homeostasis is what keeps the cell living.
what might happen if the human body did not have specialized cells tissue organs and organ systems to maintain homeostasis
It would die.
If the body can't maintain homeostasis, the organism could die because of lack of enzyme function.
It will die.
It would die.
Homeostasis keeps your body stable even when things outside your body changes. This means without your homeostasis you will not survive!
Oxygen enters the blood to become available to cells.
you will die
it will die because the process of homeostasis is the internal stable environment
The cell would die as it couldn't maintain homeostasis.
You would have a mineral defeciency and eventually become very ill. Your body needs minerals to maintain fluid/electrolyte balance to maintain homeostasis.
It doesn't - unless the cardiac output also goes up. Ideally these should happen simultaneously, but in humans it often does not.