more numbers and formulas
numbers and size/scale
what is?
Physical environment
miscl.
100

Surface area (SA) =
Volume (V) =  

Surface area (SA) = 4 π r2
Volume (V) = 4/3 π r3

100

sound travels how much faster? 

sound travels 4.6X faster in water than air

100

What is Comparitive physiology

It is a branch of science that seeks to understand how animals function within the constraints of their environment

100

Changeable environments select for?

versatility and tolerance

100

does partial pressure of oxygen increase or decrease with increasing altitude?

decreases with increasing altitude

200

SA vs. V has a slope of
SA/V vs. V has a slope of  

SA vs. V has a slope of 0.67
SA/V vs. V has a slope of -0.33

200

water is how much denser than air?

820X

200

environmental stress

environments create abiotic and biotic stress on animals that drives natural selection and
adaptation.

200

Energy restricted habitats and high energy habitats are?

Energy restricted habitats (e.g., deserts) have
simple communities with short food-chains. High energy habitats (e.g., rain forests) have complex, diverse communities with complex
food webs.

200

what is stenothermic? what is eurythermic?

narrow range of temps

wide range of temps


300

Four possible relationships
between a physiological variable
and animal size
 

1. does not scale- variable independent of size 
2. A linear or isometric relationship:
variable is directly proportional to size
(e.g., blood or lung volume)
3. A linear or isometric relationship that
does not pass through the origin:
variable is shifted higher or lower (e.g.,
eutherian vs. metatherian metabolism)
4. A curvilinear relationship: variable is
proportional to size raised to a power <
or > 1 (e.g., metabolic rate)

300

thermal conductivity of water to air?

23X

300

environmental fluctuations 

environmental factors may fluctuate on
variable time scales from thousands of years to
annual lunar or daily cycles and finally to hours and minutes

300

what is an adaptation?

A process by which natural selection adjusts the
frequency of genes that code for traits affecting fitness

300

what is thermal conductance?

Thermal conductance refers to heat flow per unit time per unit area per degree temperature difference (watts/ m2/ oC)

400

Allometry for species may differ depending on:
1. 

2.

3.

 

Allometry for species may differ depending on:
1. Age or developmental stage (young vs. old animals)
2. Season (hormonal influences)
3. Metabolic state (e.g., fed vs. fasting)

400

what is the attenuation of light in water vs air?

333X greater

400

Energy/ recource availability

energy availability in a habitat affects
community structure

400

Environmental characteristics that effect whole oranism?

Environmental characteristics affecting the whole organism
1. Gravity (buoyancy), friction, inertia, drag: influences body size,
locomotion and the vestibular system (balance)
2. Oxygen concentration or partial pressure of oxygen: influences
oxidative metabolism
3. Pressure, temperature and salinity: influence cellular protein (e.g.,
enzyme) structure and function
4. Thermal conductivity: influences thermoregulation and metabolism
5. Humidity and aridity: influences body hydration

400

what is illuminance?

Illuminance or light level: the total luminous flux on a surface per unit
area (measured in lux) 

500

Osmoconformers
Osmoregulators  

Osmoconformers match their body osmolarity to their environment actively or passively.
Osmoregulators tightly regulate their body osmolarity, which always stays constant, and are more common in the animal kingdom.  

500

Three parameters can be changed as the size of an
organism increases:  

dimensions, materials and design

500

gravity, friction, inertia, drag

Gravity is the force that gives weight to objects with mass and has
a major influence on size, locomotion and flight
• Friction is the force resisting the relative motion of solid surfaces,
fluid layers, and material elements sliding against each other and
affects all forms of locomotion
• Inertia is the resistance of a physical object to any change in its
motion and affects all forms of locomotion
• Drag (i.e., air resistance or fluid resistance) refers to forces that act
on an object in the direction of flow and increase exponentially with
velocity in water (includes friction drag and profile drag)

500

Environmental characteristics affecting sensory systems

Environmental characteristics affecting sensory systems
6. Illuminance or light level: influences visual systems
7. Frequency, attenuation and speed of vibrations (sound) through air,
water or solid material: influences mechanosenstive systems (i.e.,
lateral line, hearing)
8. Chemical diffusion in air and water: influences olfaction and
gustation
9. Electrical field: influences electroreception (bioelectric stimuli)
10. Geomagnetic field: influences magnetoception

500

Observations that fall outside of allometric predictions may indicate

adaptations within species

M
e
n
u