Animal diversity 28 Flashcards
Ectothermy strategies
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
Endothermy strategies
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
How does body size affect endotherms/ectotherms
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)
Example of ectotherms having for energy for biomass
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
Ectotherm adaptation for temp reg
1) e.g. desert iguanas change colour throughout the day to change absorption
How do ectotherms cope with extremely low temperatures
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
Example of a completely endothermic fish
E.g. Opah-sunfish
-distributes warm blood throughout the body
Ectothermy
Body temp relies on environmental sources
Poikilothermy
Internal temp varies considerably - opposite of homeothermy
Homeothermy
Retains an entirely stable internal temp under normal conditions - includes fishes
Endothermy
all endotherms are homeotherms, not al homeotherms are endotherms
body temp relies on metabolic activity
How does ectotherm and endotherm growth rate compare
- 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 )
Insulation
- a way to cope with the cold
- insulation value of pelts higher value for arctic species
How do aquatic mammals deal with cold
- wet fur loses all insulative properties
- aquatic mammals have thick layer of blubber to conserve heat
Torpor
a state of physical or mental inactivity; lethargy.