300 likes | 584 Views
Temperature Relations. 鄭先祐 (Ayo) 靜宜大學 生態學系. Chapter 4. Ayo 台南站: http://mail.nutn.edu.tw/~hycheng/ Email add: Japalura@hotmail.com. Outline. Microclimates ( 微氣候 ) Aquatic Temperatures ( 水域溫度 ) Temperature and Animal Performance Extreme Temperature and Photosynthesis
E N D
Temperature Relations 鄭先祐(Ayo) 靜宜大學 生態學系 Chapter 4 Ayo 台南站:http://mail.nutn.edu.tw/~hycheng/ Email add:Japalura@hotmail.com
Outline • Microclimates (微氣候) • Aquatic Temperatures (水域溫度) • Temperature and Animal Performance • Extreme Temperature and Photosynthesis • Temperature and Microbial Activity • Balancing Heat Gain Against Heat Loss • Body Temperature Regulation (體溫調節) • Plants • Ectothermic Animals (外溫動物) • Endothermic Animals (內溫動物)
Microclimates (微氣候) • Macroclimate: Large scale weather variation. (大尺度的氣象變化) • Microclimate: Small scale (小尺度)weather variation, usually measured over shorter time period. • Altitude (高度) • Higher altitude - lower temperature. • Aspect (面向) • Offers contrasting environments. • Vegetation (植被) • Ecologically important microclimates.
Microclimates • Ground Color (地表顏色) • Darker colors absorb more visible light. • Boulders (大圓石) / Burrows (洞穴) • Create shaded, cooler environments.
Aquatic Temperatures(水域溫度) • 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 (河岸邊地區)
Aquatic Temperatures • Riparian vegetation influences stream temperature by providing shade.(提供陰影)
Temperature and Animal Performance • Bio-molecular Level (生物分子層級) • 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).
Extreme Temperatures and Photosynthesis • Photosynthesis(光合作用) • 6CO2 + 12H2O C6H12O6 + 6O2 + 6H20 • Extreme temperatures usually reduce rate of photosynthesis. • Different plants have different optimal temperatures. • Acclimation (適應): Physiological changes in response to temperature. • Acclimatization (適應)
Temperature and Microbial Activity • Morita studied the effect of temperature on population growth among psychrophilic (嗜冷) marine bacteria around Antarctica (南極洲). • Grew fastest at 4o C. • Some growth recorded in temperatures as cold as - 5.5o C. • Some thermophilic(嗜熱) microbes have been found to grow best in temperatures as hot as 110o C.
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
Body Temperature Regulation • Poikilotherms (變溫) • Body temperature varies directly with environmental temperature. • Ectotherms (外溫) • Rely mainly on external energy sources. • Endotherms (內溫) • Rely heavily on metabolic energy. • Homeotherms maintain a relatively constant internal environment.
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).
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.
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.
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.
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.
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
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.
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
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
0n the net • Biological structure and function • Temperature regulation • Thermal relations