Synonymer & Anagram | Engelska ordet ECTOTHERMIC
ECTOTHERMIC
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11
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Exempel på hur man kan använda ECTOTHERMIC i en mening
- Amphibians are ectothermic, anamniotic, four-limbed vertebrate animals that constitute the class Amphibia.
- Reptiles, as commonly defined, are a group of tetrapods with an ectothermic ('cold-blooded') metabolism and amniotic development.
- Like all other squamates, snakes are ectothermic, amniote vertebrates covered in overlapping scales.
- Chromatophores are largely responsible for generating skin and eye colour in ectothermic animals and are generated in the neural crest during embryonic development.
- The naked mole-rat exhibits a highly unusual set of physiological and behavioral traits that allow it to thrive in a harsh underground environment; most notably its being the only mammalian thermoconformer with an almost entirely ectothermic (cold-blooded) form of body temperature regulation, as well as exhibiting a complex social structure split between reproductive and non-reproductive castes, making it and the closely related Damaraland mole-rat (Fukomys damarensis) the only widely recognized examples of eusociality (the highest classification of sociality) in mammals.
- They have a complex life cycle that comprises vegetative forms in two hosts—one an aquatic invertebrate (generally an annelid but sometimes a bryozoan) and the other an ectothermic vertebrate, usually a fish.
- Gigantothermy (sometimes called ectothermic homeothermy or inertial homeothermy) is a phenomenon with significance in biology and paleontology, whereby large, bulky ectothermic animals are more easily able to maintain a constant, relatively high body temperature than smaller animals by virtue of their smaller surface-area-to-volume ratio.
- A generalized ontogenetic diet shift occurs, with a higher percentage of ectothermic prey in juveniles, changing to a greater percentage of endothermic prey in adults, particularly small mammals.
- The gradient steepness (the amount of change in species richness with latitude) is not influenced by dispersal, animal physiology (homeothermic or ectothermic) trophic level, hemisphere, or the latitudinal range of study.
- The parietal eye is also lost in ectothermic ("cold-blooded") archosaurs like crocodilians, and in turtles, which may be grouped with archosaurs in Archelosauria.
- Most bony fishes are ectothermic, or cold-blooded, but this species, much like the related tunas, is endothermic and is able to raise its body temperature to achieve a degree of thermoregulation.
- The warm temperature increases the outcomes of the neonate growth and survival since they are ectothermic poikilotherms, meaning they depend on the environment for body heat that controls metabolism and growth.
- The notion that Griphobilharzia amoena is the only schistosome found in a cold-blooded animal (crocodile), leads to the hypothesis that perhaps Griphobilharzia amoena and other schistosomes are based in ectothermic archosaurs.
- In 1986, a paper by Bennett and Ruben asserted that the Permian was sufficiently warm to support ectothermy (cold-bloodedness), additionally noting that other successful fauna of the time were ectothermic.
- In ectothermic animals, moderation of temperature, along with architectural modifications to absorb, trap or dissipate energy, maximises the rate of development, as in the case of the communal silk nests of the small eggar moth Eriogaster lanestris.
- However, the question of whether sauropods were endothermic or ectothermic plays a major part in how sauropods were muscled, as endotherms have particularly more intestines and stomach than ectotherms.
- Countergradient variation has been described in many ectothermic animals, since ectotherms rely on environmental temperature to regulate their metabolic rates, and thus, their growth rates.
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