All humans have what is referred to as "normal values" meaning a normal temperature is expected between say 35 Celsius and 37 Celsius. to literally answer your question no they do not all have the same temperature because it varies with exercise and age but if the body is functioning normally it should be between the above values.
No, body temperature can difference between persons. It can vary from 96°F to 100°F. Differences vary due to age but also due hormone fluctuation.
This means some people can feel as though it's hot outside, while others find it to be chilly. I hope this answers your question.
When the German physician, Carl Wunderlich, first reported 37 degrees Celsius (or 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit) as the average human body temperature in 1861, he claimed to have drawn his conclusion from more than a million armpit measurements of 25,000 patients. As unlikely as that sounds, it's true that "normal body temperatures" are largely based on observation, and not any comprehensive theory.
yes.. obviously
yes all humans have the same normal body ttemprature
Same as humans
98.6 F. That goes for everyone of any age.
Lower than a humans, yet all plants have different temperatures.
dont think soo
dont think soo
No becase they go on all four
Warm blooded animals all have some ability to regulate their body temperature. Depending on the surrounding temperature, at some point the body temperature will be the same as the plant temperature. But when the surrounding temperature changes, the plant's temperature will change with it, while warm blooded animals will stay at the same temperature.
Cold-blooded animals never keep the same body temperature all day. Two types of cold-blooded animals are amphibians and reptiles.
Since whales are mammals, they control their temperature the same way humans, and all other mammals do. We are considered "warm" blooded animals, meaning the body controls it's own temperature. Whales use an insulating layer of fat under their skin, known as blubber, whereas humans usually only have a thin layer of skin. This layer helps maintain the heat that the body is producing. There is an area in the brain, known as the hypothalamus, that is in control of body temperature. The brain will try to maintain an even temperature no matter what the outside temperature is.
All ants are ectothermic - that is their body temperature is not self-regulated. This is the same as "cold-blooded" in common terms, but "cold-blooded" does not mean that an animal's blood is cold - it just means that it changes temperature according to what the external temperature is. So-called "warm-blooded" animals, by contrast, like humans, have a body temperature that stays roughly the same no matter what the outside climate is.
The three Vertebrate groups that have the same temperature as their surroundings are Fish, Reptiles, and Amphibians. That means they are all cold blooded.