temperature 4: dealing with cold Flashcards

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1
Q

endotherms that deal with freezing temp; challenges and methods

A

(main concerns convection and radiation)

  • pure water freezes at 0
  • ice occupies 10% more space and requires energy to form
  • tissues are 70-90% water
  • plasma freezes at -1.6, seawater at -1.9
  • air temp easily reaches -50+wind chill
    behaviours: migrating to warmers areas, burrow/huddling, or preparing in advance with food, insulation
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2
Q

relaxed endothermy=temporary decrease of core Tb

A
  • by temporarily lower BMR, heat production is reduced and enter a hypometabolic state
  • this saves fuel when food is limited
    ie. topor overnight in birds and small mammals and hibernations over winter in mammals (mass affects entry for hibernation
  • topor=U shaped, hibernations=L shaped with periodic arousals
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3
Q

preventing freezing in ectotherms

A
  1. stopping ice crystal growth

2. supercooling

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4
Q

stopping ice crystal growth

A
  • fish and insects can tolerate negative temp body fluids
  • via antifreeze proteins (AFP) and glycoproteins (GP) stopping ice growth, bringing freezing point down to -2C
  • AFP=multiple tandem sequences of Thr-Ala-Ala
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5
Q

supercooling

A
  • formation of ice requires NUCLEATING AGENT

- supercooling avoids nucleating agent at -10C, allows for many winter hardy insects

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6
Q

controlled freezing in ectotherms through location and kinetics: intra vs extracellular ice formation

A

intracellular ice formation=draws water from extracellular space causes cells to swell and rupture and crystals puncture cell membrane
extracellular=more favorable because cells shrink and osmotically concentrate as water is drawn from them

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7
Q

pre-freeze prep in frogs and insects

A
  • make extracell nucleators, ie. long chain alcohols
  • ice forms preferentially in extracell space at -7C
  • make intracell solutes from large glycogen reserves that help retain cell water and stabilize tertiary structures
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8
Q

regional endothermy in ectotherms:

A
  1. preflight warming of thorax muscles in insects

2. elevated red muscles in tunas and some sharks

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9
Q

pre-flight warming of thorax muscles in insects

A
  • wing movement, antagonistic muscle contractions (shiver-like?), and futile cycling of glycogen (activation of glycolytic and gluconeogenic enzymes) warm thorax
  • thorax warmed to 30C for take-off
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10
Q

elevated red muscle in tuna and sharks

A
  • aerobic red muscle is insulated by white muscle
  • massive countercurrent arrangment of arterioles and venules keep heat from being lost in venous blood as it leaves red muscle; heat of arterial blood transfers to venous to keep red muscle warm throughout
  • allows tuna to perform vertical foraging dives, cardiac temp kept=Ta
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11
Q

behavioural thermoregulation: wanna-be endotherms

A
  • (focused on conduction and radiation)
  • reptiles regulate at 28-33C, metabolic heat not able to raise Tb>Ta
    1. must gain heat from environment via basking in radiant heat (direct/reflected solar heat, warmed surfaces), or conductive head (CONTACT with warm surfaces)
    2. control of blood flow to skin (form of internal convection)
  • improves efficiency of heat gain/loss, acts as a regulatory system (similar appearance to topor)
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12
Q

summary

A
  • endothermy does not always mean constant or even Tb
  • ectothermy does not always mean Tb=Ta
  • animal life exists well below freezing, but not near boiling point
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