Body temperatures vary, even within humans. The body temperatures of mammals range from around 97° to over 103° Fahrenheit. Birds have average temperatures of around 105° Fahrenheit.
Average Body Temperatures
AnimalFahrenheitCentigradeElephants97.736.5Humans98.637.0Whales98.637.0Bat98.637.0Horse100.438.0Seal100.438.0Baboon100.638.1Rabbits101.038.3Cows101.538.6Dogs102.038.9Cats102.239.0Goats103.439.7Midpoint of extremes100.638.1
Since the starfish is a cold-blooded animal, its body temperature is the same temperature as the surrounding water it lives in. Each starfish's temperature varies.
Since the starfish is a cold-blooded animal, its body temperature is the same temperature as the surrounding water it lives in. Each starfish's temperature varies.
An animal that maintains its body temperature within a narrow range even when the environmental temperature varies is a warm-blooded animal.
no
A bird is a warmblooded animal because it's body temperature/blood temperature do not match the temperature of the environment is in. A shark is cold-blooded because it's body temperature changes with the water it's in.
It has a body that takes the temperature around it.
The three features that an animal needs to control their body temperature include the skin, blood circulation system and effectors. All these coordinate so that an animal will adjust in accordance to the temperature it requires.
The animal with the highest body temperature is the common shrew, reaching up to 105°F (40.56°C). The coldest body temperature recorded in an animal belongs to the wood frog, which can survive being frozen solid at temperatures as low as -16.6°F (-27°C).
The animals that control it internal body is called indpendent animal
An animal that cannot regulate its body temperature internally is a thermoconformer. One that can regulate its body temperature internally is a thermoregulator.
An animal whose body temperature changes with the temperature of the environment is called an ectotherm. Ectotherms rely on external sources to regulate their body temperature, such as basking in the sun or seeking shade to cool down. Examples include reptiles and amphibians.
warmblooded