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1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4

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Page 1: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Temperature Relations

Chapter 4

Page 2: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Microclimates

• Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation.• Microclimate: Small scale weather variation,

usually measured over shorter time period. Altitude

Higher altitude - lower temperature. Aspect

North-face shaded in Northern Hemisphere. Offers contrasting environments.

Vegetation Ecologically important microclimates.

Page 3: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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North

Page 4: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Microclimates

• Ground Color Darker colors absorb more visible light.

• Boulders / Burrows Create shaded, cooler environments.

Page 5: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Temperature Response of Metabolic Processes

• Enzymes: Optimum temperature. Multiples isozymes with different optima.

• Complex Processes: Photosynthetic optimal temperature. Acclimation within species (physiological)

• Whole organism: Cardinal temperatures (min, optimum, max) Bacteria to man.

Page 6: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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04_08.jpg

Page 7: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Optimal Photosynthetic Temperatures

Page 8: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Page 9: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Body Temperature Regulation

• Poikilotherms Body temperature varies directly with

environmental temperature.• Ectotherms

Rely mainly on external energy sources. Behavior and anatomical features used.

• Endotherms Rely heavily on metabolic energy.

Homeotherms maintain a relatively constant internal environment (birds and mammals)

Page 10: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Balancing Heat Gain Against Heat Loss

• HS = Hm + Hcd + Hcv + Hr - He

HS = Total heat stored in an organism

Hm = Gained via metabolism

Hcd = Gained / lost via conduction

Hcv = Gained / lost via convection

Hr = Gained / lost via electromag. radiation

He = Lost via evaporation

Page 11: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Heat Exchange Pathways

Page 12: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Temperature Regulation by Plants (ectothermy)

Page 13: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Page 14: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Page 15: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Page 16: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Temperature Regulation by Animals (ectothermy)

• Move to …. (e.g. Angilletta’s lizards)

• Pigmentation (e.g. Curruther’s grasshoppers)

Page 17: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Temperature Regulation by Endothermic Animals

• Cooling: Anatomical features. Evaporative cooling.

• Thermal neutral zone is the range of environmental temperatures over which the metabolic rate of a homeothermic animal does not change. Breadth of TNZ varies among endotherms. Tropics narrow TNZ Polar broad TNZ

Page 18: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Thermal Neutral Zones

Page 19: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Endotherms Surviving Extreme Temperatures

• Inactivity Seek shelter during extreme periods.

• Reducing Metabolic Rate Hummingbirds enter a state of torpor

when food is scarce and night temps are extreme.

Hibernation - Winter Estivation - Summer

Page 20: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Countercurrent Heat Exchange

Page 21: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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http://www.bio.davidson.edu/Courses/anphys/2000/CrawfordR/ccbloodflow.htm

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Temperature Regulation by Endothermic Animals

• Warming Insect Flight Muscles Bumblebees maintain temperature of

thorax between 30o and 37o C regardless of air temperature and flight activity.

Sphinx moths (Manduca sexta) increase thoracic temperature due to flight activity.

Thermoregulates by transferring heat from the thorax to the abdomen

Page 23: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Temperature Regulation by Thermogenic Plants

• Almost all plants are poikilothermic ectotherms. Plants in family Araceae use metabolic

energy to heat flowers. Skunk Cabbage (Symplocarpus foetidus)

stores large quantities of starch in large root, and then translocate it to the inflorescence where it is metabolized thus generating heat.

Page 24: 1 Temperature Relations Chapter 4. 2 Microclimates Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, usually measured

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Eastern Skunk Cabbage

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Sources for images

• http://astrosun.tn.cornell.edu/~shami/smoky/lizard.jpg• http://www.sf.airnet.ne.jp/~yasuda/main/greenland/mo02.jpg• http://www.gotostcroix.com/hiking/images/cactus.jpg• http://wenlin.network.com.tw/goat/Old_Data/~english/alpine_plant/450/plant_29.

JPG• http://

www.americansouthwest.net/slot_canyons/photographs700/creosotebush.jpg• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Bumblebee_closeup_cropped.jpg