Any temperature near or below freezing for several hours can be harmful.
In cold weather, dogs should be provided warm shelter, at least, and heated accommodations when the temperature (or wind chill) is near freezing.
They don't, they are cold blooded, and their blood temperature is based on the outside air temperature.
Pit bulls, like all dogs, are sensitive to extreme cold. It is generally not safe to leave a pit bull outside in temperatures below freezing (32°F) for an extended period of time. It's important to provide adequate shelter and protection from the cold to keep your pit bull safe.
It is cold all of the time, with temperature always in the negatives.
No. Because even though the temperature is hot their body temperature stays cold and doesn't rise up.
Locusts are cold blooded, just like all other insects. Their body temperature changes to whatever the outside temperature is. When it is warn during the day they jump around and are active. In cool weather they don't move.
coolant tempure sensor,thermastat
Yes, it is possible for the outside temperature to change slightly in a 10-minute interval due to factors such as sunlight, wind speed, and cloud cover influencing the local weather conditions. However, drastic temperature changes within 10 minutes are unlikely unless there is a sudden weather event, such as a passing cold front or storm.
REPLACE THE OUTSIDE SENSOR.THE OUTSIDE TEMP. SHOULD SHOW ALL THE TIME,INSIDE ONLY WHEN INSIDE CONTROLE IS MOVED..........
all
Yes, they are cold blooded. A frog is an amphibian and like most other amphibians is an ectotherm, meaning it depends on outside sources of heat to keep a near constant body temperature, this is what used to be called 'cold blooded'.
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.
Ants, as with all insects are considered to be cold blooded, as their body temperature is controlled via external means and varies.