Frogs have the same body temperature as their environment, roughly about 10 to 20 degrees C. If the temperature becomes much higher than 20 degrees or lower than 10 degrees, frogs will become inactive and shelter in burrows or in the water.
No, frogs are cold-blooded, so their body temperature varies with their surroundings.
yes, birds are warm-blooded.
hair gives you warmth and that warmth keeps your body temperature up
A bird maintaining a constant body temperature is showing homeostasis.
Your brain helps your body to maintain a constant temperature by detecting temperature receptors that are found in the skin. Temperature is controlled by the hypothalamus.
When moving, bats can maintain a constant body temperature because they are warm-blooded. However, if they are dormant, their body temperature will be based on the temperature of their environment.
No body temperature is kept constant regardless of the weather by Homeostasis, which is a inbuilt mechanism in the bodies of mammals and some other animals.
The body temperature of a fish swimming around in water that is 60 degrees would be 60 degrees also. This is because fish, unlike mammals, are coldblooded; they do not waste energy keeping their body temperature constant. Their body temperature would match that of the water around them.
How do are body's maintain a constant temperature?
no
No. A spider has no mechanism to maintain its body temperature.
why the human body temperature always remains constant in normal person
No, catfish are not endothermic. Endothermy uses methods such as shivering, sweating, panting, storing and burning fat to keep the body temperature at a constant rate. Catfish, and indeed all fish are actually poikilothermic. This means that there body temperature rises and falls with their environment. When a fish is in cold water their body temperature falls to match it, and when it moves to warm water it rises again. Fish can move deeper in the water too cool down and swim higher when they need more warmth. By doing this, the fish is able to regulate its body temperature.
homoithermic
yes
homeothermy
No, catfish are not endothermic. Endothermy uses methods such as shivering, sweating, panting, storing and burning fat to keep the body temperature at a constant rate. Catfish, and indeed all fish are actually poikilothermic. This means that there body temperature rises and falls with their environment. When a fish is in cold water their body temperature falls to match it, and when it moves to warm water it rises again. Fish can move deeper in the water too cool down and swim higher when they need more warmth. By doing this, the fish is able to regulate its body temperature.
All mammals are classified as endotherms, which means they have some ability to keep a constant body temperature. However, endothermy is not complete, so a disease or extreme outside temperatures could overpower the mammal's ability to keep its body temperature constant.
no they are cold blooded they are the temperature of their surroundings