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Temperature Regulation Simplified Revision Notes

Revision notes with simplified explanations to understand Temperature Regulation quickly and effectively.

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Temperature Regulation

infoNote

Homeostasis: the maintenance of a constant internal environment.

  • Plants: Plants can survive in a wide range of temperatures. Transpiration cool plants down.
  • Animals: Some regulate temperature more easily than others. Humans maintain a constant temperature of 37°C.
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Transpiration is the loss of water vapour from the aerial parts of a plant.

Ectotherms

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Ectotherms are animals that cannot maintain a constant internal environment (e.g., reptiles, insects).

  • Environmental temperature changes will cause a change in their internal temperature.
  • Example: reptiles, insects.
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Endotherms

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Endotherms are animals that can maintain a constant internal body temperature, despite changes in external temperature (e.g., mammals, birds).

  • Endotherms' main source of heat is from metabolic reactions, which are controlled by thyroxine (a hormone produced by the thyroid gland). image

To stay cool, endotherms:

  1. Sweat: Heat is lost as water evaporates from the skin.
  2. Vasodilate: Blood vessels widen to increase heat loss.
  3. Breathe rapidly: Heat is expelled through faster respiration.

To warm up, endotherms:

  1. Shiver: Skeletal muscles contract and relax, producing heat.
  2. Goosebumps: Hair stands up, trapping a layer of warm air close to the skin.
  3. Vasoconstrict: Blood vessels narrow, reducing blood flow to the skin and minimising heat loss, keeping vital organs (e.g. heart) warm while extremities get colder.
  4. Secrete thyroxine: Increases metabolic activity in body cells, generating heat.

Energy Demands:

  • Endotherms eat more frequently than ectotherms due to high energy demands.
  • Endotherms need a lot of energy to regulate their temperature, so they must eat large volumes of food at regular intervals.
  • Ectotherms need less energy and can survive without food for long periods of time.
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