Biology Chapter 25
Behavioral Responses
Adjusting animals behavior to the environment such as migrating, warming themselves, etc.
Metabolic heat production
Chemical energy is converted to ATP and the cells use this to work and heat is produced.
4 forms of heat exchange
Conduction, convection, radiation, and evaporation
Osmoconformers
Do not undergo a net gain or loss of water.
Radiation
Emission of radioactive waves that can transfer heat without direct contact
Insulation
Hair, feathers, and fat layers.
Circulatory adaptations
Heat loss can be altered by change in amount of blood flowing through the skin. Vessels constrict to keep heat and dilute to lose heat.
Osmoregulation
Homeostatic control of the uptake and loss of water and solutes.
Evaporation
Loss of heat from surface of a liquid that's losing some of its molecules as a gas
5 categories of adaptations that help animals thermoregulate
Metabolic heat production, insulation, circulatory adaptations, evaporative cooling, and behavioral responses.
Osmoregulators
Must actively regular water movement since their solute concentration is different from their environments.
Evaporative cooling
Panting, sweating, or spreading saliva on body surfaces to keep cool.
Conduction
Transfer of heat by direct contact
Convection
Transfer of heat by movement of air or liquid past a surface
Countercurrent heat exchange
Warm and cold blood flow in opposite directions in two adjacent blood vessels.
Urine
Waste material produced by urinary system.
Ectotherms
gain most of their heat by external sources
Thermoregulation
homeostatic mechanism by which animals maintain an internal temperature with optimal range despite variation in external temperature
Endotherms
warmed by mostly heat generated by own metabolism