energy and thermoregulation. maintaining internal environments: challenge for all living...

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Energy and Thermoregulation

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Page 1: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Energy and

Thermoregulation

Page 2: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Page 3: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Regulators: use internal control mechanisms to regulate internal change in the face of fluctuations in the external environments.

Conformers: allows internal environment to conform to external changes (for a particular environmental variable)

Page 4: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Regulating and conforming are extremes of a continuum: Organisms may conform to some environmental factors and regulate others. e.g. fish – thermoconformers, osmoregulators.

Page 5: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Homeostasis (steady state): Maintaining relatively steady internal environment even when external environment changes significantly.

Dynamic equilibrium: external factors try to change internal environment, internal control mechanisms oppose such changes. Body temperature: 37oC pH: 7.4 blood glucose: 90mg/100mL of blood

Page 6: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Mechanisms of homeostasis:

Set point: the desired temperature (variable)

Stimulus: fluctuations in the variable

Sensor: detect stimulus and triggers an appropriate change

Response: activity that helps return the variable to the set point

Page 7: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Home heating system as an example of homeostasis

Page 8: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Do you see the machanism of homeostasis here ?

Page 9: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Negative feedback loop: response that reduces the stimulus. (exercise and sweting)

Positive feedback loop: responses amplify the stimulus (labor)

Page 10: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Regulated changes of setpoint: e.g. temperatures change when asleep and awake, hormone levels in women’s menstrual cycle

Acclimatization: change in normal range of homeostasis in response to internal environment. e.g. increased blood flow and red blood cell production

Acclimatization is not adaptation – acclimatization is temporary; adaptation is natural selection working on a population over several generations.

Page 11: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Homeostatic process for thermoregulation: Essential to maintain internal temperatures within “tolerable” range. Enzymes have narrow optimal temperature range.

10oC change in temperature reduces enzyme

activity 2 to 3 fold Proteins start to denature and loose activity

Page 12: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Endothermy: warm themselves by heat generated by metabolism (birds and mammals). Have ways of warming and cooling their bodies. Consume more food than ectotherms

Ectothermy: gain their heat from external sources (amphibians, lizards, snakes, turtles, fishes). Mostly change body temperature by behavior.

Endotherms may have some ectothermic behavior. Two strategies are not mutually exclusive.

Page 13: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Poikilotherm: Animal whose temperature varies with environment

Homeotherm: Has a relatively constant body temperature

Common misconception: poikilotherms are coldblooded; homeotherms are warmblooded.

Page 14: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Balancing heat loss and gain:

Heat exchange is regulated by four physical processes: Conduction Convection Radiation Evaporation

Page 15: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Thermoregulatory organ: major role played by the integumentary system (skin, hair, nails, fur, scales, claws)

Page 16: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Theromregulatory adaptations: Insulation Circulatory adaptations Evaporative loss of heat Behavioral adaptations Adjusting thermogenesis

Page 17: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Theromregulatory adaptations: Insulation Circulatory adaptations Evaporative loss of heat Behavioral adaptations Adjusting thermogenesis

Page 18: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Insulation: Prevent flow of heat

between animal and environment

Hair, feather: traps air and insulates, raising hair traps more air

Goose bumps Some animals ooze oil

into their hair to prevent them from getting wet

Page 19: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Theromregulatory adaptations: Insulation Circulatory adaptations Evaporative loss of heat Behavioral adaptations Adjusting thermogenesis

Page 20: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Circulatory adaptations: Regulate blood flow near body

surface and maintain core body temperature

Vasodialation: nerve signals relax muscles of the superficial blood vessel walls, increased blood flow to the surface, heat directed to the skin, increase in surface temperature, heat dissipated by radiation, example: jack rabbits ears

Vasoconstriction: Diameter of superficial blood vessels decrease, reduces blood flow to the surface and prevents heat loss.

Page 21: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Circulatory adaptations contd….

Countercurrent exchange: arrangement of tissues and blood vessels in a particular way that maximizes heat exchange.

Example: goose and dolphin;

Page 22: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Vein

Artery

Skin

Capillarynetwork withinmuscle

Bloodvesselsin gills

Heart

Artery andvein underthe skin Dorsal aorta

Great white shark

Page 23: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

…..also helps maintain core body temperature in essential tissues, like flight muscles

Page 24: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Bluefin tuna

Body cavity

31°29°

25°27°23°

21°

Page 25: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Theromregulatory adaptations: Insulation Circulatory adaptations Evaporative loss of heat Behavioral adaptations Adjusting thermogenesis

Page 26: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Evaporative heat loss: Water evaporates

considerable heat during evaporation

Panting in dogs Sweating Fluttering of pouch at

the base of the mouth

Page 27: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Theromregulatory adaptations: Insulation Circulatory adaptations Evaporative loss of heat Behavioral adaptations Adjusting thermogenesis

Page 28: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Behavioral responses: Migration Body orientation Hibernation Bathing Huddling Storing high calorie

food (honey)

Page 29: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Theromregulatory adaptations: Insulation Circulatory adaptations Evaporative loss of heat Behavioral adaptations Adjusting thermogenesis

Page 30: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Adjusting thermogenesis: Shivering thermogenesis: heat production as a

result of increased muscle activity Nonshivering thermogenesis: some specialized

chemical reactions results in heat production instead of ATP in mitochondria

Page 31: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Adjusting thermogenesis contd… Some ecothermic animals can do some endothermic

regulation (egg incubation by Burmese python, resulting from spasmodic muscle contraction)

Page 32: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Adjusting thermogenesis contd… Some insects perform “warm-up” preflight shivering to get

critical muscles warmed up

Page 33: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Acclimatization in Thermoregulation: Thicker coat during winter Enzymes with different optimal temperatures but same

function Cells with antifreeze compounds

Page 34: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Physiological thermostats – temperature regulation in humans:

Page 35: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Fever: increase in set point of body temperature in the hypothalamus, for instance – response to infections

Fever has some defensive functions Fever is observed in endotherms Ectotherms have behavioral adaptations that

function like development of fever, during an infection

Page 36: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Bioenergetics:

Related to animal’s size, activity, environment

Determines food need

Overall flow and transformation of energy in an animal

Page 37: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Energy allocation and use:

Animals obtain energy for various activities from food

Food is digested in the body by enzymatic hydrolysis

Digested food generates ATP as a result of cellular respiration

ATP is used for biosynthesis, growth, repair, reproduction etc. and for generating heat

Page 38: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Quantifying energy use: Metabolic rate: sum of all energy requiring

biochemical reactions over a given time interval. Can be measured by heat production, carbon dioxide

production, food consumption etc.

Page 39: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR): Minimal metabolic rate of a nongrowing endotherm at rest, in an empty stomach, at comfortable temperature with no generation or shedding of heat.

Human males – 1,600 to 1,800 kcal (C) per day Human females – 1,300 to 1,500 kcal per day

Page 40: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Standard metabolic rate (SMR): metabolic rate of a fasting nonstressed ectotherm at a particular temperature.

Alligator – 60 kcal per day

Page 41: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Maximum metabolic rate (MMR): Highest rate of ATP use; is inversely related to the duration of the activity.

Page 42: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Size and metabolic rate: Relationship between metabolic rate and

body mass is constant across a wide range of sizes and forms

Metabolic rate is roughly proportional to the body mass, to the ¾ power (m ¾)

The reason for this is not yet known

Page 43: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Energy budgets:

Page 44: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Torpor, Hibernation, Energy conservation:

Physiological state of low activity, low metabolism, body temperature drops, allowing the animal to save energy and avoid situations where it is more vulnerable

Hibernation is long term torpor.

Page 45: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Small animals with higher metabolism go into torpor; bats torpor during the day, hummingbirds at night.

Page 46: Energy and Thermoregulation. Maintaining internal environments: Challenge for all living environments

Certain squirrels show prolonged torpor with brief arousals in winter.