Thermoregulation
A mammal's ability to maintain it's internal body temperature is an example of homeostasis. Without the ability to maintain a constant internal temperature, animals would quickly die.
A endothermic maintain a nearly constant internal body temperature regardless of the temperature of their environment. These animals are called warm- blooded animals.
Animals that maintain a constant body temperature are called "endotherms." This means they can regulate their internal body temperature regardless of the external environment. This ability allows them to thrive in a variety of habitats and climates.
When animals respire, one of the products of this reaction is heat. This heat helps the animal to maintain its internal temperature.
Warm-blooded animals and plants have fundamentally different mechanisms for temperature regulation. Warm-blooded animals, or endotherms, maintain a stable internal body temperature through physiological processes such as metabolism, sweating, and shivering. In contrast, plants do not regulate their internal temperature like animals; instead, they rely on external environmental conditions and mechanisms like transpiration and evaporative cooling to manage heat. Thus, their methods of temperature control are not comparable.
No. A spider has no mechanism to maintain its body temperature.
Endothermic animals maintain constant body temperature in a number of ways. One way is to lay out in the sun.
Ectothermic animals have an internal body temperature that changes with the temperature of its surroundings. A vertebrate is an animal with a backbone. A warmblooded animal has a constant internal temperature so WARM-BLOODED ANIMALS ARE NOT THE SAME AS ECTOTHERMS.
Warm-blooded animals.
Cold blooded animals do not control their internal body temperature. Warm blooded animals do.
They are cold blooded animals. They don't maintain their own temperature. Their temperature depends upon the temperature of the water they are in.
Homeostasis:The ability of a system or living organism to adjust its internal environment to maintain a stable equilibrium; such as the ability of warm-blooded animals to maintain a constant temperature; Such a dynamic equilibrium or balance