Ch. 44?
Respiratory
Ch. 40/41
Random
Random Pt. 2
100

What is DDT?

This pesticide entered aquatic food webs and became more concentrated at higher trophic levels.

100

What is blood shunting?

This adaptation shunts blood away from the gut and into the brain & heart during deep dives.

100

What are regulators?

Animals that maintain internal conditions despite external change.

100

What is hydrolysis?

Chemical digestion uses this type of reaction to break polymers into monomers.

100

What is increased surface area and short diffusion distance?

The reason diffusion works best across thin, moist surfaces.

200

What is biological magnification?

The process by which toxins increase in concentration as you move up trophic levels.

200

What is countercurrent exchange?

Fish use this mechanism, where water and blood flow in opposite directions.

200

What is negative feedback?

Sweating and shivering are examples of this control mechanism.

200

What are molars?

Herbivores typically have these specialized, flattened teeth.

200
About how much energy is transferred between each trophic level?

Only about this percent of energy transfers to the next trophic level.

300

What is myoglobin?

This oxygen-binding molecule is stored at extremely high levels in diving mammals.

300

What are parabronchi?

Birds use these tiny tubes for continuous gas exchange.

300

What is countercurrent heat exchange?

This mechanism conserves heat by exchanging warm arterial and cool venous blood.

300

What is hemolymph?

Insects use this circulatory fluid instead of blood.

300

What is the top trophic level?

Apex predators receive the least energy because they occupy this level.

400

What is bradycardia?

Elephant seals slow their heart rate during dives; this term describes it.

400

What are posterior and anterior air sacs?

These sacs in birds allow one-way airflow through the lungs.

400

What is torpor?

A short-term drop in metabolic rate and body temperature.

400

What is the pulmocutaneous circuit?

Amphibians use their lungs and skin in this circuit.

400

What is fusiform shape?

Sharks and penguins share this streamlined body form by convergent evolution.

500

What are collapsible lungs?

These structures collapse in deep-diving mammals to avoid nitrogen absorption.

500

What is the operculum?

These protect the gills of a bony fish.

500

What is an essential amino acid?

Lysine is an example of this type of nutrient that must be obtained from diet.

500

What is one-way airflow?

Birds achieve highly efficient respiration because airflow is this, not tidal.

500

What is buccal pumping?

Amphibians use this pumping process to ventilate their lungs.