| Zoology, 5/e Stephen A. Miller,
College of the Ozarks John B. Harley,
Eastern Kentucky University
Temperature and Body Fluid Regulation
Suggested ReadingsChapter ObjectivesAfter reading this
chapter you should be able to:
Chapter 28 Suggested ReadingsBooks Hochachka, P., and Somero, G. 1984. Biochemical Adaptations. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.
Rankin, J. C., and Davenport, J. 1981. Animal Osmoregulation. New York: John Wiley & Sons.Articles
Beauchamp, G.K. 1987. The human preference for excess salt. Scientific American, July.
Carey, F. G. 1983. Fishes with warm bodies. Scientific American, February.
Coutant, C. 1986. Thermal niches of striped bass. Scientific American, February.
Degabriele, R. 1980. The physiology of the koala. Scientific American, July.
Eastman, J., and DeVries, A. L. 1986. Antarctic fishes. Scientific American, November.
Flam, F. 1989. Antifreezes in fish work quite similarly. Science News, June 30.
French, A. R. 1988. The patterns of mammalian hibernation. American Scientist 76(6): 568-75.
Heinrich, B. 1989. The raven's feast. Natural History, February.
---. 1987. Thermoregulation in winter moths. Scientific American, March.
Irving, J. 1966. Adaptations to cold. Scientific American, January.
Lee, R. E. 1989. Insect cold-hardiness: To freeze or not to freeze. BioScience 39: 308-13.
Mommsen, T., and Walsh, P. 1989. Evolution of urea synthesis in vertebrates. Science 243: 72-75.
Ruppert, E., and Smith, P. 1988. The functional organization of filtration. Scientific American, March.
Schmidt-Nielsen, B. 1988. Excretory mechanisms as examples of the principle "The whole is greater than the sum of its parts." Physiol. Zool. 61: 312-21.
Schmidt-Nielsen, K. 1981. Countercurrent systems in animals. Scientific American, May.
Storey, K., and Syorey, J. 1990. Frozen and alive. Scientific American, December. |
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