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Temperature Regulation Modes of Heat Loss and Heat Gain

 Radiation

 Conduction

 Convection

 Evaporation Body Temp = Heat Produced + Heat Gained – Heat Lost (By ) (From Environment) (To Environment) Temperature Tolerances

CTmin CTmax The Desert Pupfish

Critical Thermal Maximum = 430C or 109.40F Triple Jeopardy

 An increase in water temperature results in a decrease in the oxygen content of the water

 An increase in water temperature results in an increase in temperate. This results in a/an______increase in metabolic rate and a/an ______increase in the need for oxygen by the fish

 The higher the water temperature the _____faster the fish has to move its operculum to ventilate the gills Operculum covers gills Large Mouth Bass

Brook Trout The Desert Iguana

Critical Thermal Maximum = 470C or 1170F Most Lizards Escape Heat in Burrows

• The desert iguana, like other lizards, is slow moving and vulnerable to predators when it first emerges in the morning Amphibian, , or ? Endotherm or ? Amphibian, Reptile, or ? Endotherm or Ectotherm? Bird, Reptile, or Mammal? Endotherm or Ectotherm? Amphibian, Reptile, or Bird? Endotherm or Ectotherm? Amphibian, Reptile, or Bird? Endotherm or Ectotherm? Ectothermy Versus Endothermy

 Mostly  Mostly Poikilothetmic Homeothermic

 Low Metabolic Rate  High Metabolic Rate  Environment is the primary source of  Metabolism is the body temperature primary source of body temperature  Invertebrates, fish, amphibians, and Poikilothermic

 Animal with a fluctuating body temperature.

 Most are poikilothermic Homeothermic

 An animal that maintains a fairly constant body temperature

 Most endotherms are homeothermic Ectotherms: Behavioral Temperature Regulation

 Laboratory  Environment

 Body temperature  Body temperature varies with cage maintained at fairly temperature constant levels

Desert Spiny Lizard

 Maintains body temperature at about 930F Whiptail Lizard

0  Mean temperature is between 104 – 106 F, yet it occupies the same environment as the desert spiny lizard

The Horned Lizard

• Melanophores

• Ant specialist

• Capillary network in head

• Horns as anti- predator device? The Coachwhip or Red Racer

A lizard eating snake Kangaroo Rat

•Endothermic

•Nocturnal

•Burrowing Water Balance In The K-Rat When are most mammals active in the desert? Why? Big horn sheep Antelope Ground Squirrel

• A poikilothermic endotherm

• Diurnal The Desert Tortoise

• Preferred body temperature is about 800F

• Uses urinary bladder as a canteen The Desert Tortoise

• Burrows to escape heat

• Burrows during

• Estivation – summer inactivity

An Endangered Species :

Body temperature and oxygen consumption (red line) are high when hummingbirds are active during the day but may drop to 1/20 these levels during periods of food shortage.

Dawn Dusk Torpor: Deer Mouse

• Most widely distributed mammal in North America

• Found from below sea level in Salton Sea area to 11,200 ft. in the southern Sierra Nevada in California Hibernation: Black Bears

• Many textbooks say bears do not hibernate – This is not true

• Heart rate drops from 40-70 beats per minute to about 8-12 beats per minute

• Body temperature drops 3-50C

• The biggest difference between bears and other hibernators is that once a bear is down it does not wake up to defecate, urinate, or eat all winter Golden Mantle Ground Squirrel