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Revision GuideEduNinja Editorial Team6 min read2026-07-05

IB Biology SL B3/C3 Animal Physiology: Nerves and Feedback

Revise IB Biology 2025 SL B3/C3 animal physiology with neurons, synapses, hormones, feedback, homeostasis and answer chains.

IB Biology SL B3/C3 Animal Physiology: Nerves and Feedback

Animal Physiology is a high-mark IB Biology topic when you revise it as an answer system rather than a list of labels. The exam rarely rewards naming a structure on its own. It rewards the link between the structure, the process, and the wording that explains why the process works.

Current syllabus map: This article is aligned to the IB Biology first assessment 2025 roadmap, especially B3/C3 organism-level animal structure, coordination, interaction and regulation.

This guide turns the source notes into a cleaner revision route. Use it after reading your class notes: first rebuild the core idea, then practise one short answer, then check whether your sentence includes the exact mechanism the markscheme expects.

IB Biology SL Animal Physiology study diagram

Use the relevant EduNinja course pages as your base:

Do not open every link at once. Start with the notes or topic page, then move into question practice and use any PDF resource only when it helps clarify the exact idea you are revising.

Quick Answer

  • Neurons transmit electrical impulses along membranes and chemical signals across synapses.
  • Synapse questions need neurotransmitter release, diffusion, receptor binding, and signal termination.
  • Hormones travel in blood and act on specific target cells with receptors.
  • Homeostasis uses receptors, control centres, effectors, and negative feedback.

The useful rule is simple: define the term, identify the structure or process, then explain the biological consequence.

Core Concept That Gets Marks

The core concept in Animal Physiology is not memorisation. It is the ability to turn a diagram or keyword into a cause-and-effect explanation.

Idea What to check How to turn it into marks
Neuron Direction and speed of impulse Label dendrite, axon, myelin, and synapse when relevant.
Synapse Chemical transmission between cells Use vesicle, neurotransmitter, receptor, and diffusion.
Hormone Blood-borne messenger Mention target-cell specificity through receptors.
Feedback Restores variable toward set point Use receptor, control centre, effector, and response.

When a question says "explain", do not stop at the label. Add the mechanism and the consequence.

Weak Answer vs Mark-Worthy Answer

Topic point Weak answer Mark-worthy answer
Neuron Names the idea but does not explain the tested relationship. Label dendrite, axon, myelin, and synapse when relevant.
Synapse Names the idea but does not explain the tested relationship. Use vesicle, neurotransmitter, receptor, and diffusion.
Hormone Names the idea but does not explain the tested relationship. Mention target-cell specificity through receptors.

Weak answers usually sound correct because they contain the topic word. Strong answers show the relationship that the examiner is testing.

Worked Example 1

Question: Describe transmission across a synapse.

Markscheme-style answer: An arriving impulse causes vesicles to release neurotransmitter into the synaptic cleft. The neurotransmitter diffuses across the gap and binds to receptors on the postsynaptic membrane, triggering a response in the next cell. It is then broken down or removed to stop continuous stimulation.

Why this scores: It links a named structure or process to the reason it matters. That connection is where most explanation marks sit.

Worked Example 2

Question: Explain negative feedback in homeostasis.

Markscheme-style answer: A receptor detects a change away from the set point. The control centre processes the information and sends signals to effectors. The effectors produce a response that reduces the original change, helping restore stable internal conditions.

Why this scores: It gives the answer in a sequence. IB Biology answers often lose marks when the order is wrong, even if the vocabulary is familiar.

Question-Type Breakdown

Question type First move What the marker is looking for
Define or state Write the exact term before adding detail Precise vocabulary with no extra confusion
Label a diagram Identify the system and direction of movement Correct labels and arrows, not guessed parts
Explain Use because, therefore, or so that A visible cause-and-effect chain
Compare Pair points in the same sentence or row Both sides of the comparison
Interpret data Describe the trend before explaining it Evidence plus biological reason

Topic-Specific Revision Route

  1. Redraw the simplest version of the topic from memory.
  2. Add the three terms you most often confuse.
  3. Write one structure-function sentence for each key part.
  4. Answer one short exam-style question without notes.
  5. Mark the missing wording and turn it into a flashcard.

Do this before rereading a whole PDF. Rereading feels calm, but retrieval shows whether the idea is actually available under exam pressure.

Common Mistakes That Cost Marks

  • Saying hormones travel through nerves.
  • Forgetting receptors in hormone or synapse answers.
  • Calling negative feedback a process that makes change bigger.
  • Leaving out the effector in homeostasis explanations.

The fix is to write corrections as exact sentences, not vague reminders. "Revise more" is not useful. "Mention concentration gradient before diffusion" is useful.

Exam-Ready Mini Checklist

  • Did I define the main term accurately?
  • Did I identify the structure, process, or direction of movement?
  • Did I explain the mechanism rather than just name it?
  • Did I include units, ratios, probabilities, arrows, or labels where the question needed them?
  • Did I avoid mixing this topic with a similar process?

How EduNinja Helps

Use EduNinja as the active practice loop. Start with the notes page to rebuild the concept, move into the question bank to test it, then use flashcards or your error log to keep the correction alive.

The best next step is small: one topic, one question set, one correction list. That beats opening five resources and leaving with no marked work.

FAQ

How should I revise Animal Physiology for IB Biology SL?

Start with the core definitions, then practise one diagram or short explanation question. Mark whether your answer included the mechanism, not just the vocabulary.

Are notes enough for this topic?

Notes are useful for rebuilding understanding, but they are not enough for exam readiness. You need questions to test whether you can retrieve the idea and apply it to unfamiliar wording.

What should I do if I keep losing marks?

Look at the missing sentence in your answer. Most repeated errors come from a missing direction, missing mechanism, missing comparison, or unclear use of a technical term.

Related Study Links

Closing

Animal Physiology becomes easier when every note is converted into an answer move. Name the idea, explain the mechanism, and make the mark-worthy link visible.

IBBiologyRevision GuidePDF Source
IB Biology SL

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