Thermoregulation
Ho Jae Han
College of Veterinary Medicine
  Seoul National University
Keywords
ㆍEndotherms and Ectotherms           ㆍHypothermia and Hyperthermia
ㆍHeat loss and Heat production       ㆍNeural control of body temperature
ㆍNonevaporative heat loss            ㆍTorpor, Hibernation, Estivation
ㆍHeat exchange                       ㆍAdaptation, Acclimation, Acclimatization
ㆍWays to regulate body temperature
ㆍEvaporative heat loss
ㆍHeat production
Ectotherms and Endotherms
Heat production and Heat loss
                                Basic principle:
                                The quantity of Heat production
                                =The quantity of Heat loss
                                *Sensible heat loss=Nonevaporative heat loss
                                Latent heat loss=Evaporative heat loss
                                Ambient temperature
                                =Temperature of environment
Heat exchange
Conduction
             H = CA(Tskin±Tair or water)
             H = heat
             C = thermal conductance
             A = area of skin where heat exchange occurs
             T = temperature
             The amount of heat transferred is proportional to
             the magnitude of the temperature gradient.
Effective insulators: reducing heat conduction
(Fur)                              (Blubber of Whale)
Convection
             Heat gain or loss by convection is achieved by the
             movement of fluid or gas in contact with the skin,
             whether this be air or water.
Radiation
            -Visible spectrum
            ->is dependent on color of
            absorbing surface
            -Infrared spectrum
            ->is independent of color
            ->has almost 100% of
            absorptance and emissivity
Radiation
            Heat exchange by radiation involves the transfer of heat
            by electromagnetic waves and, within the natural
            environment, consists of heat transfer within both the
            visible and the infrared portions of the spectrum.
            -Heat gain = absorption of visible spectrum + infrared
            radiation from surrounding solid materials
            -Heat loss = infrared radiation from the animal
Total effects of nonevaporative heat exchange
        Heat gain                             Heat loss
        Metabolic rate   Radiation absorbed   Re-radiation   Convection   Evaporation
        15               85                   67             9            24
Ways to reduce nonevaporative heat loss(1)
         Total insulation = External insulation + Tissue insulation
 Ways to reduce nonevaporative heat loss(2)
Although white fur will absorb less heat than a        If the fur is either crimped or the hairs are arranged in
black fur, polar bear fur allows maximal penetration   many directions, then the incident radiation will be
of solar radiation and minimal convective heat loss    reflected not only away from the animal but also into
because of its arrangement.                            the coat and may be absorbed deep into the fur or
                                                       even at the skin surface.
Ways to reduce nonevaporative heat loss(3)
Piloerection                          Behavioral means: reducing surface area
Functions of arteriovenous anastomoses in thermoregulation
Examples of the countercurrent heat exchange
                           Leg of aquatic birds   Flipper of marine animals
Evaporative heat loss
                        Panting is associated with brain-cooling system
Evaporative heat loss
                        Sweating mechanism related with nerve is highly-
                        specialized between species.
Evaporative heat loss
  Heat production: nonshivering thermogenesis
Brown fat is especially important in newborn and hibernating
animals.
Heat production: shivering thermogenesis
  Note that this process is involuntary.
Hypermetabolism
                  -At temperatures below C in this figure, known as the
                  lower critical temperature, heat production must be
                  increased in order to maintain a constant body
                  temperature.
Hypothermia
              -33~35°C
              1)decline in function of CNS
              ->damage to thermoregulatory reflex
              2)ventricular fibrillation
              3)Regional hypothermia induces tissue death, also
              known as frostbite
Therapy for Hypothermia
                          -Using warmed lactated Ringer's solution (to assist in
                          the reversal of metabolic acidosis)
                          -Warming of the skin (preferably by water immersion),
                          -Monitoring cardiac electrical function for possible
                          ventricular fibrillation.
 Hyperthermia
                                                     -Heat stress: Early phase of hyperthermia
                                                     ->Dehydration, Hypovolemia, Hypotension
                                                     -Heat stroke: 41~43°C
                                                     ->Rise of brain temperature, damaging its neural
                                                     control
                                                     *Brachycephalic breeds are more susceptible to
                                                     hyperthermia.
 Metabolic rate and thus heat production approximately
double with every 10℃ increase in body temperature,
the so-called van't Hoff effect.
Therapy for hyperthermia
                           - Cooled lactated Ringer’s solution
                           - Spray cooling of the skin
                           - Air for evaporation
                           *Immersion to icy water: causing
                           cutaneous vasoconstriction, which
                           hampers heat removal.
Neural control of body temperature(1)
Neural control of body temperature(2)
Thermoreceptors in body
Response to the stimuli
Fluctuation in body temperature
                                  -The normal range of body temperature means that the
                                  body temperature can be modified without external
                                  stimuli by its physiological mechanisms.
                                  -Normal diurnal fluctuation in the controlled level of
                                  body temperature such that it is lowest at the time of
                                  awakening and highest at the end of activity and before
                                  sleep.
                                  -At the time of ovulation, the controlled mean daily
                                  temperature increases, usually over a 24-hour period, by
                                  0.5 to 1℃. Progesterone secretion appears to be the
                                  controlling factor, since daily mean body temperature
                                  increases coincidentally with the rise in plasma
                                  progesterone levels at the end of the cycle.
Fever
Torpor
         -Daily torpor is when the regulated body temperature is
         reduced, thereby reducing metabolic rate and energy
         expenditure.
         -The energy cost of rewarming is high and, in bat
         species, is achieved by brown fat oxidation.
         -birds that do not possess brown fat such as
         hummingbirds use shivering thermogenesis assisted by
         basking behavior.
Hibernation, Estivation
                          -Seasonal abandonment of
                          homeothermy due to seasonal
                          fluctuation in food availability
                          -It may undergo long periods of sleep
                          with some degree of hypothermia.
                          -The larger the hibernating animal is, the
                          higher the set point of body
                          temperature during hibernation is. This is
                          because larger animals are not able to
                          rewarm their body by only shivering
                          thermogenesis.
Hypometabolism without hypothermia
                               -Hypometabolism without hypothermia has been
                               described in small species of mouse (Acomys) that
                               inhabit eastern Mediterranean deserts.
                               -Their response to negative energy balance is to
                               reduce both basal metabolic rate and exercise energy
                               expenditure to such a level that the metabolic rate
                               almost approaches that of ectotherms.
                               -During this period of hypometabolism, normothermia
                               is maintained.
The strategies of camel to inhibit water loss
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Adaptation, Acclimation, Acclimatization
1. Adaptation defines the innate characteristics that allow an animal to survive
in adverse environments.
2. In acclimation, certain physiological changes result from prolonged
exposure to a single component of the environment(e.g., heat), and allow the
animal to respond more effectively to the environmental stressor.
3. Acclimatization describes the physiological changes with fluctuations in
several environmental parameters rather than one component.