Ectothermic relates to an animal that regulates its temperature based on its surrondings (also called cold-blooded).
This is in different to an endotherm, which regulates its temperature with the help of internal systems.
No. Axolotls are ectothermic, which is commonly referred to as 'cold-blooded'. Axolotls are amphibians, and all amphibians are ectothermic, as are fish and reptiles. Their body temperature is dependent on external environmental conditions.
Ectothermic organisms, such as reptiles and amphibians, have body temperatures that fluctuate with changes in environmental temperature. They rely on external sources of heat to regulate their body temperature.
Warm blooded animals make their own heat, so as long as they are well fed, they can regulate their temperature well. Cold blooded animals don't do this (which is why they eat less and live longer), so their temperature could fluctuate with environmental changes. This would be bad for them (think of the optimum temperatures for enzymes etc.) so they need to regulate this. Water's high specific heat capacity means that it needs a lot of energy to warm up, or it needs to lose a lot of energy to cool down. Animals that have a lot of water in them need larger environmental temperature changes to effect their body temperature.
Animals that have a constant body temperature are called endotherms. They regulate their body temperature internally, regardless of external environmental conditions. Warm-blooded animals like mammals and birds are examples of endotherms.
And endothermic organism can regulate and produce its own body heat using homeostasis. An example of this type of organism would be any mammal or bird. An ectothermic organism must obtain its body heat from an outside source, such as the sun, or a heating pad or light in captivity. Reptiles are all ectotherms.
Snakes are reptiles, which means they are ectothermic: they get their body heat from external sources.http://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/animals/Snakes.htm
Snakes are reptiles, which means they are ectothermic: they get their body heat from external sources.http://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/animals/Snakes.htm
Ectothermic organisms control body temperature by using external means, such as the sun.
Ectothermic refers to "cold blooded" animals: that is, they have little or no regulation of their internal temperature. If it's cold out, they're cold, if it's warm, they're warm. Endothermic refers to "warm blooded" animals (like us). They keep their internal temperature the same no matter what the outside temperature is.
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.
both endothermic and ectothermic animals must regulate their body temperature
aves are endotherms because they produce their own body temperature
Its Chondrichthyans and it depends on the species. Mostly they are ectothermic but a small number of exceptions exist. Some sharks, like the thresher shark, can warm parts of its body some what, this means a few C above water temperature not like how warm blooded animals regulate temperature. So in short.Ectothermic.
No. Rattlesnakes are ectothermic, which is commonly referred to as 'cold-blooded'. Snakes are reptiles, and all reptiles are ectothermic, as are fish and amphibians. Their body temperature is dependent on external environmental conditions.
All invertebrates are ectothermic (cold-blooded) animals.
This means an organism that regulates body temperature mostly by exchanging heat with the environment. Here are some sentences.Another word for ectothermic is cold-blooded.Many ectothermic animals have scales.A snake is ectothermic.
Ectothermic is an cold blooded animal and most insects are ectothermic. Mites are considered ectothermic. Endothermic are warm blooded animals.