Top Banner
Adapting to a Varying Environment FIELD BIOLOGY & METHODOLOGY Fall 2015 Althoff Lectur e 09
29

Adapting to a Varying Environment

Feb 23, 2016

Download

Documents

fisseha

FIELD BIOLOGY & METHODOLOGY Fall 2013 Althoff. Lecture 09. Adapting to a Varying Environment. Background considerations. Each type of organism has an ___________ --the habitats which sustain its population - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Adapting to a Varying Environment

Adapting to a Varying Environment

FIELD BIOLOGY & METHODOLOGYFall 2015 Althoff

Lecture

09

Page 2: Adapting to a Varying Environment

Background considerations...

• Each type of organism has an ___________--the habitats which sustain its population

• Environmental conditions _______:a) hourlyb) dailyc) seasonallyd) annually

Page 3: Adapting to a Varying Environment

_______ changes – response of giant red velvet mite to changing environmental conditions

Ricklefs Fig. 9.2, p181, 5th edition

Page 4: Adapting to a Varying Environment

…in response to change

• Individuals can make “________” adjustments (shiver, sweat, lower body temperature, etc.) and stay-put

• Individuals can _____ to “_______” conditions require less internal adjustments

• ….or some _____________ of these responses.

Page 5: Adapting to a Varying Environment

____________________ to changes in light and surface reflectance = change in environmental conditions

Ricklefs Fig. 6.17, p128

Page 6: Adapting to a Varying Environment

Homeostasis

The ability of an individual to maintain constant __________ conditions in the face of a varying __________ environment

Not all animals do this constantly…when they don’t they may become inactive (think of “cold-blooded” species) and/or physiological functions not as efficient or finely-tuned.

Page 7: Adapting to a Varying Environment

How does a rabbit do this?

• “Internal adjustments”

a) hourly

b) daily

c) seasonally

Page 8: Adapting to a Varying Environment

How does a rabbit do this?

• “External adjustments--habitat selection”

a) hourly

b) daily

c) seasonally

Page 9: Adapting to a Varying Environment

Ricklefs Fig. 9.5, p185, 5th edition

Desert iguana regulates body temperatureby _____________________

Page 10: Adapting to a Varying Environment

Based on negative feedback

• Analogous to thermostat in a house• Influence by internal conditions and external

environment• Examine Ricklefs- Fig. 3.22, page 565 (next slide)

a) hypothalamusb) body organsc) body temperature

“____________ GOAL”

Page 11: Adapting to a Varying Environment

SET POINT

Neg

ative

Fee

dbac

k Sy

stem

Page 12: Adapting to a Varying Environment

• ______________--maintain constant bodytemperature

• ______________--use of elevatedmetabolism to counteract cooling

• ______________--reliance on external sources to maintain body temp.

• ______________--failure to regulate bodytemperature. Often referred to as

“cold-blooded” but...

Page 13: Adapting to a Varying Environment

Source of Heat? Advantage?

• Ectotherms: ___________ ex: reptiles & amphibians & insects advantage(s):

• Endotherms: ___________ex: birds & mammals advantage(s):

Page 14: Adapting to a Varying Environment

• Newton’s law of cooling: “heat loss varies in direct proportion to the gradient between body and ambient temperature”

• Endotherms counteract this with the varying rate of metabolism

• To maintain a constant “internal” temperature, a BMR must be achieved

Rates of Cooling

Page 15: Adapting to a Varying Environment

________________- BMR

The amount of energy expended by an animal at____________, that is required to maintain its body temperature at least at the lower ambient critical temperature.

Page 16: Adapting to a Varying Environment

BMR & Ambient Temperature

• Tlc - _______________________Temperature When body temperature goes below Tlc then metabolism must increase (i.e., heat production must increase) to maintain Tlc

• See next slide….

• This applies to homeothermic species (i.e., birds and mammals)

Page 17: Adapting to a Varying Environment

Met

abol

ism

temperatureFDVMK Fig. 9.2, p158

Page 18: Adapting to a Varying Environment

BMR & Tlc

• Body produces sufficient heat to maintain body temperature above Tlc

• Influenced by __________________: as body size increases, BMR increases more rapidly than body surface area. ___________ fur and feathers reduce thermal conductance.

Page 19: Adapting to a Varying Environment

BMR & Tlc…con’t

• By reducing thermal conductance, Tlc decreases with increasing size of the animal.

• Comparison:a) sparrow Tlc is 30Cb) penguin Tlc is 0C

Page 20: Adapting to a Varying Environment

__________________ Heat Exchange

• Evolved as an adaptation for homeotherms when more energy required than an individual can provide. It is an “__________ _____________”

• Some portion of the body, usually an “uncovered, uninsulated” extremity, can survive at ___________ temperatures than the rest of the body.

Page 21: Adapting to a Varying Environment

Countercurrent Heat Exchange

• Example of gulls, ducks, other birds without feathers on tarsa as illustrated in Ricklefs - Fig. 3.24, page 57 - next slide

• Arterial blood vessels anatomically in ______ ________ to venous blood vessels allows for “transfer of heat” before blood goes out to extremity and “warming up” on way back

Page 22: Adapting to a Varying Environment

Ricklefs Fig. 3.24, p57

Page 23: Adapting to a Varying Environment

_________ - another adaptation• DEFINED = a voluntary, reversible condition of

lowered body temperature and inactivity. Differs from hibernation in length of time and degree of “shutdown” by the body

• Exhibited by some species, in cool climates (or occasionally cool climates) that would starve otherwise (Fig. 3.23, page 57 - hummingbirds)

Page 24: Adapting to a Varying Environment

Ricklefs Fig. 3.24, p57

Page 25: Adapting to a Varying Environment

Activity Space

The “space” which an organism ___________. It is usually a limited range of conditions. The concept applies to all aspect’s of the individual’s life…

….have somewhat already introduced this concept with the “zone of tolerances” material

Page 26: Adapting to a Varying Environment

Activity Space - examples

• Seeds of a plant: “everything must be just right to germinate & grow” (Jack pine -- soil, light, fire, etc.)

• Southern Flying Squirrel

• Grasshoppers

Page 27: Adapting to a Varying Environment

Microhabitats

• __________________ of the habitat

• Create ___________________ (temperature, light, pH, DO2, wind velocity, availability of foods etc.) that enable the individual to most efficiently obtain food (energy intake) or reduce heat loss (energy expended)…or some combination

Page 28: Adapting to a Varying Environment

Microhabitat Selection• Choosing one “habitat” ________________ to its

availability• Contrasts habitat “use”• Example: Verdin nest

opening orientation

Page 29: Adapting to a Varying Environment

In summary…

• Most traits of organisms ________ in response to environments

• Individual organisms can respond to changes in their environment by altering their ___________________________________.

• Organisms have characteristic activity spaces defined by the conditions within they can ______ AND ______________

• Animal ___________________ whose physical conditions fall within their activity space