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1.
1. The influence of interspecific hybridization on temperature preferences and morphology was examined in newts, Triturus carnifex and Triturus dobrogicus, before and after metamorphosis.

2. Thermoregulatory behavior was measured in an aquatic thermal gradient (5–32.5 °C) during 24 h.

3. Hybrid temperature preferences were similar to preferences of maternal species in both premetamorphic larvae and recently metamorphosed individuals.

4. Hybrid morphology (i.e., forelimb length and axilla–groin distance) was intermediate relative to parental species.

5. The mismatch between morphology and thermal preference in hybrid phenotypes indicates potential hybrid disadvantage in both intermediate and parental habitats.

Keywords: Hybridization; Hybrid intermediacy; Preferred body temperature; Amphibians; Salamandridae; Metamorphosis; Larvae  相似文献   


2.

1. 1.|Larval development and metamorphosis of Achaea junta were prolonged at 22°C, compared to 27, 32 and 35°C.

2. 2.|Overall rates of consumption, assimilation, production and metabolism of the larvae increased with temperature.

3. 3.|Efficiencies of assimilation and conversion of the digested food were significantly altered by life stage and temperature.

4. 4.|About 60% of the pupal energy was transferred to the imago at the tested temperatures.

Author Keywords: Lepidoptera; Noctuidae; Achaea junta; insect; development; bioenergetics; temperature effect; moths  相似文献   


3.

1. 1.Muscle potentials in fibrillar flight muscles of worker and drone honeybees were recorded extracellularly at thoracic temperatures from 30 to 10°C.

2. 2.Extinction temperatures for muscle potentials were higher in drones for all treatments.

3. 3.Cold acclimation (15°C) lowered extinction temperatures significantly in workers and drones. Acclimitization changed extinction temperatures significantly only in drones.

4. 4.Cold acclimitization had a bigger effect on the rate of muscle potential amplitude decline with decreasing temperature than acclimation.

5. 5.Acclimation and acclimitization had no effect on the increase of muscle potential duration with falling temperature.

6. 6.Muscle potential frequency during shivering was not much different between cold and warm treated bees.

Author Keywords: Honeybee (Apis mellifera) workers and drones; flight muscle potentials; temperature acclimation and acclimitization  相似文献   


4.

1. 1.Cueta trivirgata larvae construct pits in the dry Kuiseb River bed in the Namib Desert.

2. 2.An art, Ocymyrmex robustior comprises 65.4% of the biomass of prey consumed by the ant-lions.

3. 3.O. robustior is active between surface temperatures of 27–68°C.

4. 4.Ant-lions tolerate high body temperatures (LD50 = 53.4°C).

5. 5.By exploiting the pit microclimate and by digging below the surface during extreme thermal loads, ant-lions can capture prey at surface temperatures of 13–63°C.

6. 6.These behavioural and physiological adaptations enable ant-lions to maximize the duration of vigilance and hence prey capture success.

Author Keywords: Neuroptera; Myrmeleontidae; Cueta trivirgata; ants; Ocymyrmex robustior; micro-climate; diet; behaviour; heat torpor; Namib Desert  相似文献   


5.

1. 1. In a diel cycle Procambarus clarkii has two preferred temperatures: 24.0 ± 0.15 SEM °C during the day and 26.7 ± 0.13 SEM °C at night.

2. 2. The preferred temperatures are independent from the weight of the organisms.

3. 3. In the photophase the animals are dispersed, in the scotophase they congregate.

4. 4. The crawfish seem to feed during the thermal interphases.

5. 5. Animals in a constantly dark condition maintain a diel preferendum of temperature.

Author Keywords: Diel thermoregulation; Procambarus clarkii  相似文献   


6.

1. 1.|Gemmules of Ephydatia mülleri can withstand exposure to temperatures down to −80°C for 63 days without loss of hatchability.

2. 2.|Hatching is slowed following exposure to temperatures below −27°C.

3. 3.|There is a slight but significant relationship between gemmule size and the time to hatch.

4. 4.|This species can withstand long-term exposure to winter air temperatures occurring within its known geographic range.

Author Keywords: Porifera; Spongillidae; sponge; freshwater sponge; Ephydatia mülleri; gemmule; hatching; low temperature; cold exposure  相似文献   


7.

1. 1.Effects of centrally injected noradrenaline (NA) into new-born (12–300 h. post-partum) Columbian ground squirrels (Spermophilus columbianus) were studied to provide comparative data on ontogeny of the thermoregulatory pathways in a hibernating species.

2. 2.At warm ambient temperatures (32–34°C, similar to nest temperature), NA increased heat production (47–92%). rectal temperature (0.27–1.73°C), and axillary temperature (0.59–1.92°C). Peak magnitudes of heat production increased with increasing age on a per unit weight basis.

3. 3.At lower temperatures (28–31°C), NA had no effect on heat production.

4. 4.The data indicate that metabolic and thermal responses to NA in neonates of hibernating species are comparable (e.g. rabbit. guinea pig) or different (e.g. lamb) from those observed in neonates of non-hibernating species.

Author Keywords: Ontogeny of thermoregulation; central regulation of body temperature; neonatal thermoregulation; heat production; biogenic amine  相似文献   


8.

1. 1.|The effect of short-term exposure (up to 12 h) to upper limiting temperature (45°C) on A-type medial neurosecretory cells (MNSC) of the protocerebrum of Ostrinia nubilalis larvae was studied.

2. 2.|For evaluation of the activity of MNSC, cytological parameters were used: quantity of the neurosecretory material, size of the neurosecretory granules, shape of the nuclei and size of the nucleoli.

3. 3.|After 1 h exposure to 45°C the activity of the MNSC was increased, after 3 h it was decreased, while after 6 h exposure to the same temperature some renewed increase in the activity was observed.

4. 4.|The significance of oscillatory changes in the activity of A-type MNSC in survival of the thermal stress of O. nubilalis diapausing larvae is discussed.

Author Keywords: Upper limiting temperatures; A-type neurosecretory cells; neurohormones; diapause; Ostrinia nubilalis larvae  相似文献   


9.

1. 1.|Critical thermal maxima (CTMax) and minima (CTMin) were measured to evalute thermal hardening in Rana catesbeiana.

2. 2.|Tadpoles show heat hardening and CTMax acclimation, and both responses are influenced by developmental stage.

3. 3.|The first evidence of cold hardening in vertebrates is reported here.

4. 4.|Heat hardening significantly reduces cold tolerance, but there is otherwise no evidence of a cross-hardening effect.

Author Keywords: Thermal acclimation; thermal hardening; hardening; heat hardening; cold hardening; critical thermal maxima; critical thermal minima; developmental stage; metamorphosis; tadpoles; Rana catesbeiana  相似文献   


10.

1. 1.Three month-old seedlings of Taxodium distichum, Nyssa aquatica, Cephalanthus occidentalis and cuttings of Salix nigra were acclimated to simulated natural swamp conditions (ambient temperature, saturated soil) and then used to assess direct high temperature injury of root tissue.

2. 2.Electrolyte leakage from excised root tissue exposed for 30 min to temperatures ranging from 30 to 66°C was used to assess cellular injury.

3. 3.The relationship between leakage and temperature was sigmoidal for each species.

4. 4.Inflection point temperatures on the response curves, ranged from 45.4 to 51.0°C, were species-specific, and indicated differences in thermal tolerance of root membranes.

5. 5.Root of C. occidentalis and N. aquatica were more heat tolerant than roots of T. distichum and S. nigra.

Author Keywords: Bald cypress; waver tupelo; button bush; black willow; direct heat injury; membrane heat tolerance  相似文献   


11.

1. 1.Thermal parameter of the four Gerbillurus species measured in the laboratory were examined in relation to their micro-environments in a xeric habitat.

2. 2.Basal metabolic rates (BMR) were lower than predicted, while thermoneutral zonds (TNZ) were narrow and exceeded burrow temperatures.

3. 3.Body temperatures (Tb) were regulated over a range of ambient temperatures (Ta). Evaporative water loss was used as a short-term cooling mechanism to reduce hyperthermia above the TNZ.

4. 4.Conductance was low below the TNZ to reduce heat loss.

5. 5.Adaptation to low temperatures is important for gerbils when active at night.

6. 6.The adaptive significance of the thermal biology of Gerbillurus is discussed in relation to phylogeny, distribution, food availability and nocturnal activity.

Author Keywords: Gerbillurus; thermal preferences; temperature regulation; oxygen consumption; conductance; evaporative water loss; behavioural avoidance  相似文献   


12.

1. 1.|Integrated muscle activity, total number of limb beats and the maximum instantaneous limb beat frequency were measured in crabs during a standardized tilt regime at a series of different water temperatures between 10 and 25°C.

2. 2.|Total integrated activity and total number of limb beats showed a general increase for a decrease in temperature in all groups. Frequency of limb beat was always higher for Macropipus depurator than for Carcinus maenas, with M. depurator showing an increase and C. maenas a decrease in frequencies at extreme temperatures.

3. 3.|The temperature of acclimation of C. maenas affected the response of the crab in all parameters studied while all the results can be related to the size and normal environmental temperature range of the two species studied.

Author Keywords: Temperature; tilt; swimming; crab; Carcinus; Macropipus; muscle; electromyography  相似文献   


13.

1. 1.|Temperatures at four sites along the ventral nasal concha were recorded in four unrestrained rabbits exposed to ambient temperatures from 0 to 35°C.

2. 2.|The nasal temperatures decreased and temperature gradients from proximal to distal parts of the concha increased in cold-exposed rabbits.

3. 3.|The temperature gradients increased also during panting in heat-stressed rabbits.

4. 4.|The ventral nasal concha is suggested to be an efficacious heat exchanger both in cold and hot ambient, due to its geometry and vascularization.

Author Keywords: Rabbits; temperature regulation; nasal passageway; heat exchange; Oryctolagus cuniculus  相似文献   


14.

1. 1.|Hypothalamic and rectal temperatures were recorded in 8 warm-reared (wr) and in 12 warm-acclimated control rats during resting in the heat and during 30 min running under thermoneutral conditions.

2. 2.|Brain and body temperatures of wr rats were significantly higher (P < 0.001) than control rats, both in normothermia as well as in hyperthermia; at rest, and also during exercise.

3. 3.|Warm-reared rats were more tolerant to heat.

4. 4.|During normothermia a weak selective brain cooling was present in control but absent in wr rats. During hyperthermia, however, the cooling intensified in control and occurred in wr rats.

5. 5.|The main strategy of adaptation to heat in wr rats is an upward resetting of the temperature set-point and increased passivity.

Author Keywords: Warm rearing; temperature regulation; exercise; heat stress; selective brain cooling; rats  相似文献   


15.

1. Entomopathogenic nematodes penetrate and kill Galleria mellonella within 48 h at optimal temperatures.

2. Low temperature induces infection latency, preventing host death until optimal conditions resume.

3. Infected Galleria survived 25 days at 5°C. On transfer to 25°C, 100% and 12.5% of Steinernema carpocapsae and Steinernema riobravis infected larvae died within 72 h.

4. Infective juvenile penetration decreased with decreasing temperature; declining from 49.7 and 49.3 nematodes/host at 25°C to 6.3 and 0.25 nematodes/host at 5°C for S. carpocapsae and S. riobravis, respectively.

5. Latent infection occurs, albeit infrequently, due to low host penetration at low temperature.

Author Keywords: Nematode; Steinernema carpocapsae; Steinernema riobravis; Low temperature  相似文献   


16.

1. 1.|The effect of temperature on caecal function was examined in the naked mole-rat Heterocephalus glaber, a poikilothermic mammal, which consumes a high proportion of fibre in its natural diet.

2. 2.|The temperature of optimal caecal function was determined from fermentation data measure at three specifically chosen temperatures (28, 33 and 40°C).

3. 3.|There was no significant difference between gas production at 33 and 40°C, however, gas production was significantly lower at 28°C.

4. 4.|The relative proportions of the gases produced were markedly different at 33 and 40°C (P ≤ 0.01). More methane and hydrogen were produced at 33°C than at 40°C.

5. 5.|These data suggest that microbial organisms within the caecum were active and functioning more effectively at 33°C (the preferred body temperature of the naked mole-rat) than at the other two temperatures.

Author Keywords: Caecal fermentation; temperature effects; gas production; hind gut; naked mole-rat; Heterocephalus glaber  相似文献   


17.

1. 1.|Alterations in the fatty acid composition of microsomes were most marked in the exponential phase of both 39.5- or 15°C- grown Tetrahymena pyriformis NT-1.

2. 2.|Activities of palmitoyl-CoA and stearoyl-CoA desaturases were lower in 15°C cells than in 39.5°C cells, while the activity of oleoyl-CoA desaturase was higher in 15°C cells.

3. 3.|Activities of the terminal component of the desaturation system as well as all three desaturases (palmitoyl-CoA, stearoyl-CoA, oleoyl-CoA) were higher in the exponential phase than in the stationary phase for cells grown at both temperatures.

4. 4.|NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase activity and cytochrome b5 content were reduced whereas NADH-ferricyanide reductase activity was increased in the stationary phase at both 39.5 and 15°C.

Author Keywords: Cyanide sensitive factor (CSF); cell growth in different temperatures; Δ9- and Δ12-desaturases; microsomal electron transport; temperature adaptation; Tetrahymena; protozoa  相似文献   


18.

1. 1.|Crayfish (Astacus astacus L.) were acclimated for 1–3 weeks at 5 and 20°C. The effects of temperature on the functions of the unicellular medial giant axon were studied.

2. 2.|The resting membrane potential of the giant axon increased slightly with the experimental temperature from 2 to 32°C. The temperature dependence of the resting membrane potential could be described by two lines, which intersected at about 12°C in cold-acclimated crayfish and at about 16°C in the warm-acclimated.

3. 3.|The amplitude of the action potential was stable at temperatures from 4 to 26°C. It decreased at temperatures above 26°C in both acclimation groups.

4. 4.|The duration of the falling phase of action potential was highly temperature dependent at low temperatures. A break in the slope of the dependence was found at about 14°C in cold-acclimated crayfish and at about 17°C in the warm-acclimated.

Author Keywords: Temperature acclimation; resting membrane potential; action potential; medial giant axon; crayfish; Astacus astacus L  相似文献   


19.

1. Water fleas (Daphnia magna) bred at 23°C were non-responsive to temperatures between 13 and 25°C.

2. At the lower (11°C) and upper limits (30°C) their klinokinetic avoidance behaviour showed a larger intraindividual than interindividual variation.

3. Thermal sensitivity for avoidance responses in D. magna was about 1.5°C.

4. For D. magna bred for one parthenogenetic generation at 14°C heat avoidance temperature was about 8°C lower, and cold avoidance temperature was about 1°C higher than in D. magna from 23°C.

5. In group experiments the animals showed some preference for the acclimation temperature.

6. Cold induced stenothermy and warm induced eurythermy in D. magna were related to the mode of reproduction.

Author Keywords: Thermal gradients; Thermal sensitivity; Avoidance; Preference; Daphnia magna; Thigmotaxis; Eurythermy; Stenothermy; Reproduction  相似文献   


20.

1. 1. The effects of sudden changes by increasing or decreasing the measurement temperature on the oxygen consumption of the brains of Bufo arenarum and Leptodactylus ocellatus were determined.

2. 2. The experiments were carried at in vitro at temperatures which range from 4 to 37°C. The brain was oxygenated and stabilized for 20 min at each of the temperatures to which it was subjected before oxygen consumption measurements were made.

3. 3. A theoretical curve representing the variation of oxygen consumption with temperature was calculated according to the following exponential relationship; for Leptodactylus ocellatus y = 0.408 × 1.07x and for Bufo arenarum y = 0.389 × 1.065x.

4. 4. These results were compared with the brain oxygen consumption of animals acclimated to different temperatures, whose oxygen consumption was measured at a fixed temperature. Only Leptodactylus ocellatus had a significantly lower oxygen consumption in a high range of temperatures, indicating thermal compensation, probably to save metabolic reserves.

5. 5. No deterioration of the brain tissue was observed, as several passages from high to low temperatures in the range of 20°–30°C, showed a reversible oxygen consumption in acclimated and non-acclimated Bufo arenarum and Leptodactylus ocellatus.

Author Keywords: Anuran brain; brain metabolism; oxygen consumption; acclimation  相似文献   


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