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Temperature Relations

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Microclimate: Small scale weather variation, ... Sun Basking. Grasshoppers ... muscles of many fish (Mackerel, Sharks, Tuna) are well supplied with blood ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Temperature Relations


1
Temperature Relations
  • Chapter 4

2
Outline
  • Microclimates
  • Aquatic Temperatures
  • Temperature and Animal Performance
  • Extreme Temperature and Photosynthesis
  • Temperature and Microbial Activity
  • Balancing Heat Gain Against Heat Loss
  • Body Temperature Regulation
  • Plants
  • Ectothermic Animals
  • Endothermic Animals

3
Microclimates
  • Macroclimate Large scale weather variation.
  • Microclimate Small scale weather variation,
    usually measured over shorter time period.
  • Altitude
  • Higher altitude - lower temperature.
  • Aspect
  • Offers contrasting environments.
  • Vegetation
  • Ecologically important microclimates.

4
Microclimates
  • Ground Color
  • Darker colors absorb more visible light.
  • Boulders / Burrows
  • Create shaded, cooler environments.

5
Aquatic Temperatures
  • Specific Heat
  • Absorbs heat without changing temperature.
  • 1 cal energy to heat 1 cm3 of water 1o C.
  • Air - .0003 cal
  • Latent Heat of Evaporation
  • 1 cal can cool 580 g of water.
  • Latent Heat of Fusion
  • 1 g of water gives off 80 cal as it freezes.
  • Riparian Areas

6
Aquatic Temperatures
  • Riparian vegetation influences stream temperature
    by providing shade.

7
Temperature and Animal Performance
  • Biomolecular Level
  • Most enzymes have rigid, predictable shape at low
    temperatures
  • Low temperatures cause low reaction rates, while
    excessively high temperatures destroy the shape.
  • Baldwin and Hochachka studied the influence of
    temperature on performance of acetylcholinesterase
    in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss).

8
Extreme Temperatures and Photosynthesis
  • Photosynthesis
  • 6CO2 12H2O ? C6H12O6 6CO2 6H20
  • Extreme temperatures usually reduce rate of
    photosynthesis.
  • Different plants have different optimal
    temperatures.
  • Acclimation Physiological changes in response to
    temperature.

9
Optimal Photosynthetic Temperatures
10
Temperature and Microbial Activity
  • Morita studied the effect of temperature on
    population growth among psychrophilic marine
    bacteria around Antarctica.
  • Grew fastest at 4o C.
  • Some growth recorded in temperatures as cold as -
    5.5o C.
  • Some thermophilic microbes have been found to
    grow best in temperatures as hot as 110o C.

11
Optimal Growth Temperatures
12
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

13
Heat Exchange Pathways
14
Body Temperature Regulation
  • Poikilotherms
  • Body temperature varies directly with
    environmental temperature.
  • Ectotherms
  • Rely mainly on external energy sources.
  • Endotherms
  • Rely heavily on metabolic energy.
  • Homeotherms maintain a relatively constant
    internal environment.

15
Temperature Regulation by Plants
  • Desert Plants Must reduce heat storage.
  • Hs Hcd Hcv Hr
  • To avoid heating, plants have (3) options
  • Decrease heating via conduction (Hcd).
  • Increase conductive cooling (Hcv).
  • Reduce radiative heating (Hr).

16
Temperature Regulation by Plants
17
Temperature Regulation by Plants
  • Arctic and Alpine Plants
  • Two main options to stay warm
  • Increase radiative heating (Hr).
  • Decrease Convective Cooling (Hcv).
  • Tropic Alpine Plants
  • Rosette plants generally retain dead leaves,
    which insulate and protect the stem from
    freezing.
  • Thick pubescence increases leaf temperature.

18
Temperature Regulation by Ectothermic Animals
  • Liolaemus Lizards
  • Thrive in cold environments.
  • Burrows
  • Dark pigmentation
  • Sun Basking
  • Grasshoppers
  • Some species can adjust for radiative heating by
    varying intensity of pigmentation during
    development.

19
Temperature Regulation by Endothermic Animals
  • Thermal neutral zone is the range of
    environmental temperatures over which the
    metabolic rate of a homeothermic animal does not
    change.
  • Breadth varies among endothermic species.

20
Thermal Neutral Zones
21
Temperature Regulation by Endothermic Animals
  • Swimming Muscles of Large Marine Fish
  • Lateral swimming muscles of many fish (Mackerel,
    Sharks, Tuna) are well supplied with blood
    vessels that function as countercurrent
    heat-exchangers.
  • Keep body temperature above that of surrounding
    water.

22
Countercurrent Heat Exchange
23
Temperature Regulation by Endothermic Animals
  • Warming Insect Flight Muscles
  • Bumblebees maintain temperature of thorax between
    30o and 37o C regardless of air temperature.
  • Sphinx moths (Manduca sexta) increase thoracic
    temperature due to flight activity.
  • Thermoregulates by transferring heat from the
    thorax to the abdomen

24
Moth Circulation and Thermoregulation
25
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.

26
Eastern Skunk Cabbage
27
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

28
Review
  • Microclimates
  • Aquatic Temperatures
  • Temperature and Animal Performance
  • Extreme Temperature and Photosynthesis
  • Temperature and Microbial Activity
  • Balancing Heat Gain Against Heat Loss
  • Body Temperature Regulation
  • Plants
  • Ectothermic Animals
  • Endothermic Animals

29
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