Ch 2. - Cycles of Matter (AP Content) Flashcards

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1
Q

What is metabolism?

A

Sets of life-sustaining chemical reactions in organisms.

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2
Q

What are the three main purposes of metabolism?

A
  • The conversion of food to energy to run cellular processes;
  • The conversion of food/fuel to building blocks for proteins, lipids, nucleic acids, and some carbohydrates;
  • The elimination of metabolic wastes.
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3
Q

What can the word metabolism also refer to?

A

To the sum of all chemical reactions that occur in living organisms, including digestion and the transport of substances into and between different cells.

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4
Q

What are endotherms?

A

Because metabolism is inefficient and produces heat, endotherms use metabolic heat to keep a stable body temperature.

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5
Q

What are ectotherms?

A

Metabolism is inefficient and produces heat, but ectotherms DO NOT use metabolic heat to keep a stable body temperature.

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6
Q

What is the basal metabolic rate (BMR)?

A

The “baseline” metabolic rate of an animal, for endotherms.

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7
Q

What is the standard metabolic rate (SMR)?

A

The “baseline” metabolic rate of an animal, for ectotherms.

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8
Q

How does size influence basal BMR and SMR?

A

Among endotherms, smaller animals tend to have higher per-gram basal metabolic rates (a “hotter” metabolism) than larger animals. The same is true among ectotherms, though we can’t compare between the groups.

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9
Q

How does activity level influence BMR and SMR?

A

Metabolic rate varies with activity level. More active animals have a higher metabolic rate than less active animals.

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10
Q

What is torpor?

A

Some animals enter this state of torpor in which their metabolism slows.

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11
Q

What are two examples of torpor?

A

Hibernation in the winter, and estivation in the summer.

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12
Q

BMR and SMR in both endotherms and ectotherms are measures of metabolic rate in animals that are:

A
  • At rest
  • Calm/unstressed
  • Not actively digesting food (fasting)
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13
Q

Do endotherms or ectotherms (assuming the same size) have higher metabolic rates?

A

Endotherms tend to have basal high metabolic rates and high energy needs, thanks to their maintenance of a constant body temperature. Ectotherms of similar size tend to have much lower standard metabolic rates and energy requirements, sometimes 10% or less of those of comparable endotherms.

Ex: Mr. Willard has a BMR of 1980 calories! (roughly 2 large strawberry cheesecake Blizzards from DQ, or 5 McDoubles)
Ex: Mr. Glowinski has a BMR of 1780 calories!

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14
Q

How does size affect metabolic rate? Why?

A

An elephant obviously has a higher total metabolic rate but looking at per-mass metabolic rate a gram of mouse tissue metabolizes 10x faster than a gram of elephant tissue.

Why? Full reasons unknown could have to do with Area-To-Volume Ratio.

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