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1.
The metabolic physiology of the Crested Pigeon (Ocyphaps lophotes) and the Brush Bronzewing (Phaps elegans) is generally similar to that expected for birds of their size, but the Crested Pigeon has a number of characteristics which would aid survival in hot and dry regions. Body temperature increased similarly for the Crested Pigeon (from 38.8 degrees C to 41.5 degrees C) and the Brush Bronzewing (39.3 degrees C to 41.4 degrees C) over ambient temperatures (T(a)s) from 10 degrees C to 35 degrees C. Both species became hyperthermic (body temperature, T(b)>42 degrees C) at T(a)=45 degrees C. Basal metabolic rate of the Crested Pigeon (0.65 ml O(2) g(-1) h(-1) at 40 degrees C) was approximately 71% of that predicted for a columbid bird, while BMR of the Brush Bronzewing (0.87 ml O(2) g(-1) h(-1) at 20 degrees C to 40 degrees C) was approximately 102% of predicted. Total evaporative water loss increased exponentially with T(a) for both species, from <1 mg H(2)O g(-1) h(-1) at 10 degrees C to >12 mg H(2)O g(-1) h(-1) at 45 degrees C. It was similar and low for both species at T(a)<30 degrees C, but was higher for the Brush Bronzewing than the Crested Pigeon at T(a)>30 degrees C. Ventilatory minute volume matched oxygen consumption, such that oxygen extraction efficiency did not change with T(a) and was similar for both species (approximately 20%). Expired air temperature was considerably lower than T(b) for both species at T(a)<35 degrees C, potentially reducing respiratory water loss by approximately 65% at T(a)=10 degrees C to approximately 30% at T(a)=35 degrees C. Cutaneous evaporative cooling was significant for both species, with skin resistance decreasing as T(a) increased. The Crested Pigeon had a lower skin resistance than the Brush Bronzewing at T(a)=45 degrees C. The Brush Bronzewing had apparently reached its maximum cutaneous water loss at 30 degrees C and relied on panting to cool at higher T(a).  相似文献   

2.
Several species of arboreal frogs secrete lipids from cutaneous glands and wipe these secretions over the body surfaces to reduce evaporative water losses. Following wiping, frogs become immobile in water-conserving postures, and some have suggested they are torpid. Here we report wiping behaviors and the physiological correlates of immobile postures in the arboreal monkey frog Phyllomedusa hypochondrialis. Skin resistance to water loss was comparatively high, and rates of evaporation were as low as 4% of that from a free water surface. Standard rates of metabolism (SMR) varied from 89 microL O2 h(-1) at 18 degrees C to 316 microL O2 h(-1) at 34 degrees C and were sensitive to both temperature (T) and body mass (W; mL O2 h(-1) = 0.016W0.642 x 10(0.030T)). The mean SMR did not change significantly during four consecutive days of dehydration when animals lost 19%-34% of body mass. Therefore, it appears these frogs do not routinely depress metabolic rates following wiping. However, some individuals that lost higher percentages of body water exhibited trends of decreasing oxygen consumption, suggesting that suppression of metabolic rates might occur at greater levels of body water deficit or perhaps during a slower course of dehydration than imposed by our experiments (e.g., individuals that are secluded during periods of drought).  相似文献   

3.
AIMS: To determine the effectiveness of an alkaline cleaner used in food-processing plants and a lytic bacteriophage specific for Escherichia coli O157:H7 in killing wild type and rpoS-deficient cells of the pathogen in a biofilm. METHODS AND RESULTS: Wild type and rpoS-deficient cells were attached to stainless steel coupons (c. 7-8 log CFU per coupon) on which biofilms were developed during incubation at 22 degrees C for 96 h in M9 minimal salts media (MSM) with one transfer to fresh medium. Coupons were treated with 100 and 25% working concentrations of a commercial alkaline cleaner (pH 11.9, with 100 microg ml(-1) free chlorine) used in the food industry, chlorine solutions (50 and 100 microg ml(-1) free chlorine), or sterile deionized water (control) at 4 degrees C for 1 and 3 min. Treatment with 100% alkaline cleaners reduced populations by 5-6 log CFU per coupon, a significant (P < or = 0.05) reduction compared with treatment with water. Initial populations (2.6 log CFU per coupon) of attached cells of both strains were reduced by 1.2 log CFU per coupon when treated with bacteriophage KH1 (7.7 log PFU ml(-1)) for up to 4 days at 4 degrees C. Biofilms containing low populations (2.7-2.8 log CFU per coupon) of wild type and rpoS-deficient cells that had developed for 24 h at 22 degrees C were not decreased by more than 1 log CFU per coupon when treated with KH1 (7.5 log PFU ml(-1)) at 4 degrees C. CONCLUSIONS: Higher numbers of cells of E. coli O157:H7 in biofilms are killed by treatment with an alkaline cleaner than with hypochlorite alone, possibly through a synergistic mechanism of alkaline pH and hypochlorite. Populations of cells attached on coupons were reduced by treating with bacteriophage but cells enmeshed in biofilms were protected. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: The alkaline pH, in combination with hypochlorite, in a commercial cleaner is responsible for killing E. coli O157:H7 in biofilms. Treatment with bacteriophage KH1 reduces populations of cells attached to coupon surfaces but not cells in biofilms.  相似文献   

4.
Wet thermal conductance is an important thermoregulatory parameter for birds and mammals. It is generally calculated as C(wet) (ml O2 g(-1) h(-1) degrees C(-1)) = VO2/(T(b)-T(a)), where VO2 is metabolic rate measured in ml O2 g(-1) h(-1), T(b) is body and T(a) is ambient temperature measured in degrees C. Minimum C(wet) is measured at T(a) at or below the lower critical temperature (T(lc)) of the thermoneutral zone, and is strongly influenced by time of day (rest or activity phase) and body mass [J. Aschoff, Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 69A (1981) 611]. Allometric analyses indicate differences in C(wet) for passerine and non-passerine birds, in their rest and active phases (Aschoff, 1981). The allometric slope for non-passerine rest-phase (-0.583) is lower than that for non-passerine active-phase (-0.484), and passerine rest-phase (-0.461) and active-phase (-0.463), although none of these slopes are significantly different. This different-sloped relationship for non-passerine rest-phase C(wet) extrapolates to lower-than-expected values at high body mass, and so this allometric relationship may be inappropriate for predictive purposes. Consequently, we have reanalysed Aschoff's (1981) data, as well as more recent compilations, to determine a more useful allometric relationship for C(wet) of non-passerine rest-phase birds. Re-analyses of minimum thermal conductance data from Drent and Stonehouse [Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 40A (1971) 689], Aschoff (1981) and Gavrilov and Dolnik [Acta XVIII Congressus Internationalis Ornithologici Moscow (1982) 421] indicate that the most appropriate regressions for predicting C(wet) (ml O2 g(-1) h(-1) degrees C(-1)) of birds from body mass (M; g) are the pooled regressions for non-passerine and passerine birds, in the active (alpha) and resting (rho) phases, using data tabulated by Aschoff (1981): alpha, C(wet)=0.994M(-0.509); rho, C(wet)=0.702M(-0.519). C(wet) is approximately 40% higher in the active phase than the rest phase. Regressions of various data sets for C(wet) of birds and mammals indicate a similar slope of approximately -0.5 for the allometric relationship, but significantly higher elevations for mammals compared to birds. The approximately 50% higher C(wet) for mammals than birds indicates a better physical insulation for birds than mammals of the same body mass. The general scaling of C(wet) with M(-0.5) indicates that (T(b)-T(lc)) should scale with M(0.22), if mass-specific metabolic rate scales with M(-0.28) [Reynolds and Lee, Am. Nat. 147 (1996) 735]. The observed scaling for (T(b)-T(lc)) of M(0.183) (calculated from Gavrilov and Dolnik, 1985) is consistent with this expectation.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of ambient temperatures (T(a)) from 10 degrees to 35 degrees C on metabolism, ventilation, and oxygen extraction were examined for the southern brown bandicoot (Isoodon obesulus). Oxygen consumption (VO2) followed the pattern typical for endotherms, decreasing with increasing T(a) from 10 degrees to 25 degrees C. It did not significantly change between Ta=25 degrees and 35 degrees C (the thermoneutral zone). VO2 was approximately 2.4 times higher at Ta=10 degrees C (0.967 mL O(2) g(-1) h(-1)) compared with basal (0.410 mL O(2) g(-1) h(-1)) at Ta=30 degrees C. While the metabolic rates of the bandicoots were basal at Ta=30 degrees C, respiratory frequency (f(R)) was 24.6 breaths min(-1), tidal volume (V(T)) was 7.79 mL, minute volume (V(I)) was 191.3 mL min(-1), and oxygen extraction efficiency (EO2) was 26.8%. Increased VO2 at Ta< or =25 degrees C was associated with a large increase in V(I) due to increases in V(T) and f(R). A greater proportion of the change was due to the increase in tidal volume. EO2 was constant at approximately 26% for all T(a) up to and including 30 degrees C. At Ta=35 degrees C, EO2 decreased to 17.7%, f(R) increased to 35.6 breaths min(-1), and V(T) decreased to 7.22 mL. The metabolic and ventilatory physiology of the southern brown bandicoot are typical of an unspecialized medium-sized marsupial.  相似文献   

6.
Physiological responses (oxygen consumption) and behavioral responses (feeding and activity) of the mud snails Hydrobia ulvae and Hydrobia glyca at different salinities (20 per thousand-80 per thousand) and temperatures (20 degrees and 30 degrees C) were studied. After 24 h under experimental conditions, both Hydrobia species already showed maximal activities (>90%) for a wide salinity range (30 per thousand-70 per thousand), with significant differences in activity between species only outside the usual salinity range of the studied lagoon. In contrast, egestion rates of H. glyca were significantly higher at the lowest salinities tested (30 per thousand and 40 per thousand) irrespective of water temperature, whereas egestion rates of H. ulvae were always significantly higher (57% on average) at 20 degrees C than at 30 degrees C and at the usual salinities found in the field (40 per thousand and 50 per thousand). Both species showed an oxyregulatory response to dissolved oxygen concentrations ranging from saturation to 1.5 mg O(2) L(-1), although specific oxygen consumption rates were significantly higher at 30 degrees C than at 20 degrees C (Q(10)=1.47+/-0.08 for H. ulvae and Q(10)=12.1+/-0.06 for H. glyca) and at the lowest salinities (30 per thousand-50 per thousand for H. ulvae and 30 per thousand-40 per thousand for H. glyca). On average, specific rates were higher for the smaller-sized H. glyca (1.64+/-0.03 microg O(2) mg(-1) ash-free dry weight [AFDW]) than for H. ulvae (1.35+/-0.03 microg O(2) mg(-1) AFDW). Despite the overlapping of their tolerances to high temperatures and salinities, the observed interspecies differences could play a certain role in the distribution of H. ulvae and H. glyca in the studied habitat. In particular, the decreasing feeding activity but increasing respiration of H. ulvae at 30 degrees C for salinities that usually occur in the studied lagoon could represent disadvantages to H. glyca during the warm period.  相似文献   

7.
Standard metabolic rates of S. invicta workers, males, female alates, larvae and pupae were determined using closed-system respirometry. Vdot;(O(2)) (ml h(-1)) of all castes and life stages scaled with temperature and mass. Differences between castes and life stages are discussed in light of their different life histories and the different functions of these stages within the colony. Workers, female alates, male alates, larvae and pupae had mass-specific Vdot;(O(2)) (ml O(2) g wet weight(-1) h(-1), corrected to 25 degrees C) of 0.404+/-0.023, 0.316+/-0.010, 0.674+/-0.024, 0.291+/-0.020, and 0.227+/-0.015 (mean+/-SE), respectively. Measurement of CO(2) and O(2) made possible the examination of temperature and mass effects on respiratory quotient (RQ), as well as accurate transformation of O(2) consumption to metabolic rate (&mgr;W) for comparison with other ant species. Mass-specific metabolic rates of S. invicta females and workers compare favorably with data from 17 other ant species, but metabolic rates of males (177%) and pupae (42%) fall above and below predicted rates, respectively. Several equations relating temperature and mass to Vdot;(O(2)) are presented.  相似文献   

8.
We examined the effect of temperature on resting metabolic rate in seven field-captured laughing kookaburras (Dacelo novaeguineae) during late winter and early spring. Basal metabolic rate averaged 201+/-3.4 ml O(2) h(-1) (0.603 ml O(2) g(-1) h(-1)). Overall thermal conductance (K(o)) declined with ambient temperature ( T(a)) and averaged 0.026 ml O(2) g(-1) h(-1) degrees C(-1) at T(a)s<10 degrees C. Day-night differences in body temperatures (2.6 degrees C) and in alpha-phase versus rho-phase minimum metabolic rates were much greater (33%) than predicted for 340-g nonpasserine birds and suggest that these animals operate as low-metabolic intensity animals in their rest phase, but normal-metabolic intensity animals during their active phase. Metabolic rate was measured in four of the same birds undergoing moult. Thermal conductance increased to 60% above pre-moult values about 6 weeks after moult began. Basal metabolic rate of moulting birds showing peak thermal conductance readings averaged 17 ml O(2) h(-1) higher than pre-moult measurements. Although this increase was not statistically significant, we believe the moult costs of kookaburras are too low to overcome the inherent variability of BMR determination. We suggest that moult costs of kookaburras are only somewhat higher than the measured costs of protein synthesis of other endotherms.  相似文献   

9.
The rate of spontaneous lipid peroxidation, as measured by formation of malonaldehyde (MA), was determined as a function of O2 concentration and temperature in mouse and rabbit spermatozoa released from the cauda epididymidis. The peroxidation rate was linear in O2 concentration in the suspending medium up to 210 microM (the concentration at PO2 of ambient air at 34 degrees C) for sperm from both species over the temperature range 34-40 degrees C. This is the range over which the reaction is measurable for both species: below 34 degrees C, the rates become too slow to be measured accurately for rabbit sperm by our methods, while above 40 degrees C the rates for mouse sperm become too rapid. This narrow range is characteristic of a high activation energy (EA) for the peroxidation process. Values of EA were calculated from plots of kox versus (T)-1, where kox is a second order rate constant with the units (10(8) cells/ml)-1 min-1. It is defined by the equation: vma = kox (Sp) (O2), where vma is the rate of malonaldehyde production, (Sp) is concentration of sperm cells and (O2) is the O2 concentration in the suspending medium. For mouse sperm, EA was calculated to 78.7 kcal/mol (329 KJ/mol); for rabbit sperm, the value was 77.6 kcal/ml (324 KJ/mol). These high EAs and consequent steep dependence of the spontaneous lipid peroxidation rates on temperature favor long sperm life in the epididymis at around 32 degrees C and low PO2 in these scrotal animals, while allowing for a relatively short life at 37 degrees C at higher PO2 in the oviduct.  相似文献   

10.
Physiological responses of Dunaliella salina and Dunaliella viridis, isolated from solar saltworks on the Yucatan Peninsula, were studied. Optimal growth temperature for D. salina was 22 degrees C (3.06 x 10(6) cells mL(-1)) and 26 degrees C for D. viridis (4.04 x 10(6)cells mL(-1)). Total carotenoid content in D. salina increased with temperature to a maximum of 35.14 pg cell(-1) at 38 degrees C. Dunaliella salina alpha-carotene and beta-carotene content was 0.083+/-0.003 and 0.598+/-0.020 mg 100g dry wt(-1) respectively, whereas lower values were found in D. viridis cultured under same experimental conditions (0.018+/-0.002 and 0.136+/-0.012 mg 100g dry wt(-1) respectively). The highest specific growth rate in D. salina was obtained at 10% NaCl (0.28 d(-1)), while its cell volume increased from 524 to 2066.93 microm(3) when cultured from 10% to 35% NaCl. Maximum photosynthetic rates were attained when increasing from optimal growing temperature to 30 degrees C for D. viridis (108 n mol O(2)microg chl alpha h(-1)) and D. salina (139 n mol O(2)microg chl alpha h(-1)). Photosynthetic responses to temperature variations indicated physiological adjustments in both species, with higher acclimation in D. salina. Evaluation of physiological attributes of these species will be used for to carry out mass cultivation.  相似文献   

11.
CO(2) release patterns of three drywood termite species were investigated using flow-through respirometry techniques. Eight hours of real-time CO(2) release data were recorded for pseudergates of Cryptotermes cavifrons Banks, Incisitermes minor (Hagen), and I. tabogae (Snyder) at 20-40 degrees C. Cyclic release of CO(2) was observed in 20-90% of C. cavifrons, 70-100% of I. tabogae, and 87-100% of I. minor pseudergates. Variability of the recordings (calculated as the coefficient of variability or CV) was used to estimate the level of cycling in each recording. CV ranged from 14.53+/-2.57 (40 degrees C) to 32.33+/-1.12% (30 degrees C) in C. cavifrons, 20.24+/-2.44 (35 degrees C) to 67.3+/-10.3% (20 degrees C) in I. minor, and 15.9+/-1.46 (35 degrees C) to 34.15+/-6.18% (20 degrees C) in I. tabogae. The relationship between temperature and CV for each species was modeled using non-linear regression. CV of both Incisitermes spp. decreased exponentially with temperature, while C. cavifrons CV followed a Gaussian model, indicating an optimal cycling temperature of approximately 30 degrees C. Mean V.CO(2) values were determined for each species as a function of temperature, and ranged from 0.1 ml CO(2) g(-1) h(-1) (I. minor at 20 degrees C) to 0.8 ml CO(2) g(-1) h(-1) (C. cavifrons at 40 degrees C). For all three species, V.CO(2) significantly increased linearly with temperature. Colinearity tests indicated that different models described the V.CO(2) relationship with temperature for both genera. Q(10) values for V.CO(2) over the range of 20-40 degrees C were 1.92 for I. minor, 1.66 for I. tabogae, and 1.62 for C. cavifrons pseudergates.  相似文献   

12.
Tre of the suricates exhibits a marked diurnal rhythm (mean Tre at night 36.3 +/- 0.6 degrees C and 38.3 +/- 0.5 degrees C during the day). Oxygen consumption is lowest at Ta 30-32.5 degrees C (mean 0.365 +/- 0.022 ml O2 g-1 hr-1); this is 42% below the value expected from body mass. At Ta below the TNZ, oxygen uptake rises rapidly, minimal thermal conductance (0.040 ml O2 g-1 h-1 degrees C-1) being 18% above the mass-specific level. Lowest heart rates occur at Ta 30 degrees C (mean 109.6 +/- 9.8 beats min-1) and oxygen pulse is minimal at Ta 30-35 degrees C with 40-45 microliter O2 beat-1. At Ta 15-32.5 degrees C total evaporative water loss is between 0.46-0.63 ml H2O kg-1 hr-1 and increases markedly during heat stress (to a mean of 5.35 ml H2O kg-1 hr-1 at Ta 40 degrees C). This rise of TEWL is mainly attributable to the onset of panting at Ta above 35 degrees C.  相似文献   

13.
Antifreeze proteins (AFPs) non-colligatively lower the freezing point of aqueous solutions, block membrane ion channels and thereby confer a degree of protection during cooling. Ovine embryos following prolonged hypothermic storage were used to determine 1) the type and concentration of a group of AFPs that can confer hypothermic tolerance, 2) the storage temperature, 3) the cooling rate, and 4) the in vitro and in vivo viability. In Experiment 1, Grade 1 and 2 embryos produced following superovulation were either cultured fresh (control) or stored at 4 degrees C for 4 d in media containing protein from 1 of 3 sources: Winter Flounder (WF; AFP Type 1); Ocean Pout (OP; AFP Type 3) at a concentration of 1 or 10 mg/ml; or bovine serum albumen (BSA) at 4 mg/ml in phosphate buffered saline (PBS). Following 72 h of culture, the viability rates were not different between controls (18 21 ); BSA (9 15 ); WF at 1 mg/ml (14 15 ); WF at 10 mg/ml (13 15 ) or OP at I mg/n-d (15 21 ), but were decreased (P < 0.05) in embryos stored in OP at 1 0 mg/ml (I 1 20 ). Pooled data showed higher (P < 0.05) viability rates for WF (27 30 ) than for OP (26 41 ) or BSA (9 15 ). There was no effect of protein source on hatching rates, but mean hatched diameters of embryos were lower (P < 0.05) following storage in BSA. In Experiment 2, Grade I to 3 embryos were either cultured fresh or stored for 4 d at 0 degrees or 4 degrees C in 4 mg/n-d BSA or 1 mg/ml WF. Embryos stored in WF at 4 degrees C (WF/4 degrees C) had comparable hatching rates (8 12 ) to that of controls (10 10 ), but embryos in the other treatments (WF 0 degrees C, 5 11 , BSA 4 degrees C, 6 11 and BSA 0 degrees C, 3 10 ) had significantly lower hatching rates (P < 0.01) compared with controls. Hatched diameters were comparable between controls and embryos stored in WF 4 degrees C, but embryos stored in WF 0 degrees C and BSA at both temperatures had smaller diameters (P < 0.05). In Experiment 3, Grade 1 to 3 embryos were either transferred fresh or were stored for 4 d at 4 degrees C in 4 mg/ml BSA or 1 mg/ml WF at different cooling rates (T1, BSA > 2 degrees C/min; T2, WF > 2 degrees C/min and T3, WF < 1 degrees C/min) prior to transfer. There were no differences in the number of ewes pregnant (T1, 10 1 1; T2, 6 10 and T3, 8 10 ) or in the number of viable fetuses recovered per treatment (T1, 14 25 ; T2, 10 1 4 and T3, 15 2 1) to indicate a negative effect of cooling rate or protein on embryo survival. In conclusion, ovine embryos can be stored in WF or BSA at 4 degrees C for 4 d, yielding similar pregnancy and embryo survival rates as fresh embryos following transfer to recipient ewes.  相似文献   

14.
We measured body temperatures (T(b)) in 14 free-ranging echidnas (Tachyglossus aculeatus) using implanted data-loggers. An average of 1020+/-744 days of T(b) data was recorded from each animal. The average maximum T(b) was 35.3+/-0.7 degrees C (n=14), and the lowest T(b) was 4.7 degrees C. Detailed analysis of rewarming events from four echidnas showed rewarming time to be dependent on initial T(b) (rewarming time in hours=15.6-0.41T(initial), n=31) with an average rewarming rate of 1.9+/-0.4 degrees C h(-1). Based on an hourly sampling rate, the peak rewarming rate was found to be 7.2+/-0.8 degrees C h(-1) (n=12), which was measured at a mean T(b) of 26.2+/-2.4 degrees C. This rate of heating was calculated to be equivalent to a peak oxygen consumption rate of 1.4+/-0.2 ml O2 g h(-1), approximately 9 times the basal metabolic rate. We found that a plot of rate of change of T(b) against T(b) for the entire data set from an individual echidna provided a useful summary and analytical tool.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of temperature, pH, and free [Mg(2+)] on the apparent equilibrium constant of pyruvate kinase (phosphoenol transphosphorylase) (EC ) was investigated. The apparent equilibrium constant, K', for the biochemical reaction P-enolpyruvate + ADP = ATP + Pyr was defined as K' = [ATP][Pyr]/[ADP][P-enolpyruvate], where each reactant represents the sum of all the ionic and metal complexed species in M. The K' at pH 7.0, 1.0 mm free Mg(2+) and I of 0.25 m was 3.89 x 10(4) (n = 8) at 25 degrees C. The standard apparent enthalpy (DeltaH' degrees ) for the biochemical reaction was -4.31 kJmol(-1) in the direction of ATP formation. The corresponding standard apparent entropy (DeltaS' degrees ) was +73.4 J K(-1) mol(-1). The DeltaH degrees and DeltaS degrees values for the reference reaction, P-enolpyruvate(3-) + ADP(3-) + H(+) = ATP(4-) + Pyr(1-), were -6.43 kJmol(-1) and +180 J K(-1) mol(-1), respectively (5 to 38 degrees C). We examined further the mass action ratio in rat heart and skeletal muscle at rest and found that the pyruvate kinase reaction in vivo was close to equilibrium i.e. within a factor of about 3 to 6 of K' in the direction of ATP at the same pH, free [Mg(2+)], and T. We conclude that the pyruvate kinase reaction may be reversed under some conditions in vivo, a finding that challenges the long held dogma that the reaction is displaced far from equilibrium.  相似文献   

16.
We measured body temperatures (T(b)) in 14 free-ranging echidnas (Tachyglossus aculeatus) using implanted data-loggers. An average of 1020+/-744 days of T(b) data was recorded from each animal. The average maximum T(b) was 35.3+/-0.7 degrees C (n=14), and the lowest T(b) was 4.7 degrees C. Detailed analysis of rewarming events from four echidnas showed rewarming time to be dependent on initial T(b) (rewarming time in hours=15.6-0.41T(initial), n=31) with an average rewarming rate of 1.9+/-0.4 degrees C h(-1). Based on an hourly sampling rate, the peak rewarming rate was found to be 7.2+/-0.8 degrees C h(-1) (n=12), which was measured at a mean T(b) of 26.2+/-2.4 degrees C. This rate of heating was calculated to be equivalent to a peak oxygen consumption rate of 1.4+/-0.2 ml O2 g h(-1), approximately 9 times the basal metabolic rate. We found that a plot of rate of change of T(b) against T(b) for the entire data set from an individual echidna provided a useful summary and analytical tool.  相似文献   

17.
In order to evaluate the role of some synanthropic animals in the spreading of Escherichia coli O157, laboratory rats and domestic pigeons were experimentally infected per os with E. coli O157. Rats infected with 10(5) colony forming units (cfu) (n = 5) and 10(9) cfu (n = 5) shed E. coli O157 for 2 +/- 1.7 d and 9.8 +/- 1.3 d, respectively. In the faeces of infected rats stored at 4 degrees C in a moist environment, at 4 degrees C in a dry environment or at 20 degrees C in a moist environment, E. coli O157 survived for 34 weeks. When stored at 20 degrees C or - 20 degrees C in a dry environment, E. coli O157 survived for greater than or = 36 weeks. Pigeons infected with 10(5) cfu (n = 5) and 10(9) cfu (n = 5) shed the pathogen for 14.8 +/- 3.4 d and 20.2 +/- 5.2 d, respectively. Both species, rats and pigeons, can be important in spreading of the E. coli O157 infection in cattle.  相似文献   

18.
Basal rate of metabolism (BMR) and temperature regulation are described for Goeldi's monkey (Callimico goeldii), a threatened New World primate species of the family Callitrichidae. Measurements were conducted on sleeping individuals during the night, using a special nestbox designed to serve as a respirometry chamber, such that test animals remained undisturbed in their customary surroundings. Oxygen consumption was measured at ambient temperatures between 17.5 and 32 degrees C for 10 individuals with an average body mass of 557 g. Average BMR was 278+/-41 ml O(2) h(-1), which is lower than the value predicted on the basis of body mass. Individual differences in BMR were significant even when body mass was accounted for. Body temperature was measured in five individuals below thermoneutrality and averaged 36+/-0.3 degrees C. The corresponding thermal conductance averaged 29.3+/-2.2 ml O(2) h(-1) degrees C(-1), which is similar to the expected value. The metabolic and thermoregulatory patterns observed in C. goeldii resemble those of the closely related marmosets and tamarins. Low BMR is presumably associated with limited access to energy resources and may be directly linked with phylogenetic dwarfing in the family Callitrichidae.  相似文献   

19.
1. Resting VO2 at 22.7 degrees C was 0.217 +/- 0.007 ml O2/g/hr in Nauphoeta cinerea of 0.51 +/- 0.008 g body mass. 2. Whole animal resting metabolic rate for 11 cockroach species scaled allometrically: VO2 = 0.261 M0.776. 3. Allometry of resting VO2 among cockroach species is similar to that in vertebrates, and is consistent with models based on both "elastic similarity" and "biological similitude."  相似文献   

20.
To study the allometric relationship between standard metabolic rate and body mass (mass range 16-3627 g) in green iguanas, Iguana iguana (n=32), we measured rates of oxygen consumption (V(O(2))) at 30 degrees C during scotophase. The relationship could be described as: V(O(2))(ml h(-1))=0.478W(0.734). The resulting mass exponent was similar to the 3/4 power commonly used in interspecific curves (P>0.05), but differed from a proposed intraspecific value of 2/3 (P<0.05). The mass exponents of male (n=8) and female (n=11) iguanas did not differ (P>0.05). The mass adjusted V(O(2)) was higher than predicted from generalized squamate curves. The mean mass exponent of intra-individual allometric equations of iguanas (n=7) at varying masses during ontogeny did not differ from that of the pooled equation, indicating that scaling of V(O(2)) is similar for both between and within individuals. Thermal acclimation, compensatory changes in V(O(2)) with prolonged exposure to a constant temperature, was not observed in juvenile iguanas (n=11) between 1 and 5 weeks of acclimation at 30 degrees C.  相似文献   

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