Animal diversity 28 Flashcards

1
Q

Ectothermy strategies

A

1) basking in the sun
2) ancient but effective strat
3) more food energy available to increase biomass
4) v. low energy requirements, however limits where they can live

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2
Q

Endothermy strategies

A

1) heat body using metabolism
2) derived state (birds = mammals)
3) low energy efficiency - 1% energy available for biomass increase
4) wider range of habitats available, temp independent of environment

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3
Q

How does body size affect endotherms/ectotherms

A

1) metabolic rate increases with decreasing body size (more so for endotherms)
2) heat loss is higher for smaller animals (SA/volume ratio) - don’t see v. tiny endotherms
3) ectotherms are smaller then endotherms (on average)

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4
Q

Example of ectotherms having for energy for biomass

A

E.g. Desert tortoise

  • east hardly anything + inactive a lot
  • Biomass increase by 25% each year
  • cant excrete salt without losing water, instead retains salt and is osmotically stressed
  • uses burrows to thermoregulate
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5
Q

Ectotherm adaptation for temp reg

A

1) e.g. desert iguanas change colour throughout the day to change absorption

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6
Q

How do ectotherms cope with extremely low temperatures

A

1) avoid freezing - produce anti-freeze and become “supercooled”
2) Tolerate freezing- produce cryoprotectant in cell glycerol , cells maintain low level of anaerobic activity, avoids cells becoming completely frozen

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7
Q

Example of a completely endothermic fish

A

E.g. Opah-sunfish

-distributes warm blood throughout the body

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8
Q

Ectothermy

A

Body temp relies on environmental sources

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9
Q

Poikilothermy

A

Internal temp varies considerably - opposite of homeothermy

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10
Q

Homeothermy

A

Retains an entirely stable internal temp under normal conditions - includes fishes

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11
Q

Endothermy

A

all endotherms are homeotherms, not al homeotherms are endotherms

body temp relies on metabolic activity

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12
Q

How does ectotherm and endotherm growth rate compare

A
  • although endotherms aren’t very efficient at growth they can grow all year round
  • ectotherms , efficient but low growth rates
  • endotherms -> high growth rate
  • mesotherms = middle growth rate (mostly seen in dinosaurs )
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13
Q

Insulation

A
  • a way to cope with the cold

- insulation value of pelts higher value for arctic species

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14
Q

How do aquatic mammals deal with cold

A
  • wet fur loses all insulative properties

- aquatic mammals have thick layer of blubber to conserve heat

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15
Q

Torpor

A

a state of physical or mental inactivity; lethargy.

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16
Q

How is torpor used to deal with temp variance

A
  • Adaptive hypothermia OR hibernation
  • Body temp + respiration + heart rate all decrease in activity significantly
  • Relative to body size, torpor easier for smaller bodies as takes less time to warm up
17
Q

How do endotherms cope in the desert

A
  • heat gradient reversed, heat becomes a problem not cold
  • cooling by evaporation increases dehydration
  • behavioural + physiological solutions
    E.G. camels