Animal Ecophysiology

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Flashcards on Animal Ecophysiology, created by fernac13 on 15/12/2014.
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Flashcards by fernac13, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by fernac13 over 9 years ago
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Isometric scaling Objects that are proportional (or are geometrically similar) scale isometrically
Allometric scaling Looking at the change in a trait with respect to body size.
Positive allometry Trait increases faster than size.
Negative allometry Trait increases slower than size.
Kleiber’s Law Metabolism scales with body size by a coefficient of ¾; because materials have to be transported throughout the organism.
As animals get bigger... ...they’re specific metabolism rate decreases, but lifetime metabolism is consistent.
Water balance Water used for chemical reactions, as a component or a medium. Animals need to balance the amount of water in their bodies = osmotic potential.
Iso-osmotic The concentration of solutes is same inside and outside the body or cell.
Hypo-osmotic The concentrations are lower inside than outside
Hyper-osmotic The concentrations are higher inside than outside.
Dealing with environmental change -Avoid OR -Tolerate -->conform -->regulate
Earyhaline Animals that can tolerate a wide range of solute concentrations.
Sterohaline Animals that can tolerate a narrow range of solute concentration.
Urea colorless crystalline compound which is the main nitrogenous breakdown product of protein metabolism in mammals and is excreted in urine.
TMAO counteracts urea
Marine animals -mostly iso-osmotic, sterohaline 1.drink sea water 2.comes with ions 3.uptake some (ex:Na), exclude others (ex: Ca) 4.Active transport to remove some ions taken in via gills 5.Secrete other solutes in isotonic urine
Freshwater animals -Hyper-osmotic 1.Impermeable skin 2.Do not drink freshwater 3.Solutes come from food 4.Active uptake of ions via gills 5.Secrete excess water in hypo-osmotic urine
Terrestrial animals Water and ionic balance is a constant pb. -water escapes via respiratory,digestive, reproductive systems. Water uptake: -Taking in liquid water -taking in water vapor -producing water by metabolic processes
Biochemical effects of rising temperature on animals bodies -A rising temperature makes chemical reactions more likely -Pb: most enzymes no longer function to catalyze reactions above 40C
Responses to temperature changes Short-term enzyme activity can be modified with changing temperature by: 1. Changing enzyme concentration 2. Changing substrate concentration 3. Changing energy supply for reaction 4. Alter environment in the cell
Responses to temperature changes: Medium-term and Long-term enzyme activity can be modified with changing temperature by: • Synthesizing different enzymes that perform the same function (isozymes) • Evolutionary response of enzyme structure to function at a different temperature (allozymes)
Eurythermal Animals that can tolerate a broad range of temperatures
Stenothermal Animals that can tolerate a narrow range of temperatures.
Strategies for dealing with freezing: Freeze tolerance -Advantages: Ice formation can be tolerated, critical temperatures (LCT) can be survived. Allows reduced metabolism in cold spells. -Disadvantages: Usually limited supercooling ability, Needs to have substances in place before cold hits. -Best suited for environments that regularly and consistently freeze
Strategies for dealing with freezing: Freeze intolerance (avoidance) -Advantages: High supercooling ability – can stay active in cold -Best suited for environments that are highly variable
High temperature may disrupt reaction pathways: causes of heat death: •Denaturing of enzymes •Thermal inactivation of enzymes at rates that exceed formation •Different temperature effects (Q10) on interdependent reactions •Temperature effects on membrane structure
Ectotherms =Low energy strategy.Maintains energy exchange with external environment.
Endotherms High energy strategy: maintains temperature using energy from internal metabolic processes.
Sources of heat transfer: 1.Conduction 2.Convection 3.Radiation 4.Evaporation
Conduction The direct flow of heat between two materials in direct contact.
Convection The flow of heat between two materials by the mass movement of an intervening fluid (liquid or gas).
Radiation The transfer of heat in the absence of direct contact between objects.
Keeping warm: 1.Increase metabolic heat generation (ex:shivering) 2.Lower heat exchange coefficient (ex:change heat distribution) 3.Find somewhere warmer (behavioral strategies)
Keeping cool: 1.Find somewhere cool (ex:shade) WITHOUT SHADE OR COVER: 1.Increase heat exchange coeff. (ex: move heat to body surface) 2.Increase evaporation (ex: sweating) 3.Behavioral strategies 4.Heat storage and heat exchanger
Asexual reproduction -Budding: daughter breaks off from mother cell via a bud. -Fragmentation:Fragments of a parent regenerate to form a new individual (ex: sponges) -Parthogenesis: an unfertilized egg develops into a daughter individual (ex: aphids)
Sexual reproduction = Reproduction by combining gametes -->Isogamy = same gametes (same sex species); not in animals -->anisogamy = different gametes: male= small, mobile; female= large, immobile.
Semelparity Reproduce young only once in their lives (ex: white garden snail)
Iteroparous Reproduce yong multiple times. Seasonal or random iteroparity.
Life history theory = pattern of lifetime growth, development, reproduction and survival. (rKA selection).
r selected species -Short term life spans -Smaller bodied -Rapid maturation -Explosive reproduction -Fluctuating population density -Adapted for unstable envts.
K selected species -Long life spans -Bigger bodied -Slow reproduction/ low fecundity -Stable density population -Adapted for stable envts
A Selection = Bad, unstable envts -Long life spans -Late maturation -Low fecundity -Low, fluctuating population densities
Central concept of life histories Animals must trade-off one activity with another - "decide" how to spend its resources
Resource allocation (Life history) -All animal activities require a resource (e.g.. energy, time) -Resources are not unlimited -Resources allocated to one trait (e.g. growth) cannot be allocated to another (e.g. reproduction) => TRADE OFFS
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