Abstract
This paper is a tentative application to a particular animal, the sheep, of concepts concerning heat regulation in "warm-blooded" animals, built up over ten years of laboratory, field, and library inquiry. The heat exchange between the animal and its environment is first analysed in a quantitative, physical fashion, and the deficiencies in present knowledge are pointed out. The ways in which the animal body attempts to maintain a heat balance are next considered, and the secondary consequences of these processes to the animal economy indicated. The paper concludes with a brief consideration of the comparative aspects. It is essentially a formulation of the way in which the thermal physiology of any animal should be considered, using the sheep as a convenient example. Many of the data are drawn from work carried out under the author's direction.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
41 articles.
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