• Login
    • Login
    Advanced Search
    View Item 
    •   UoN Digital Repository Home
    • Books
    • Faculty of Agriculture & Veterinary Medicine (FAg / FVM)
    • View Item
    •   UoN Digital Repository Home
    • Books
    • Faculty of Agriculture & Veterinary Medicine (FAg / FVM)
    • View Item
    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

    Comparative Pulmonary Morphology and Morphometry: The Functional Design of Respiratory Systems

    Thumbnail
    Date
    1994
    Author
    Maina, JN
    Type
    Book chapter
    Language
    en
    Metadata
    Show full item record

    Abstract
    Though there are assertions that life is possible without oxygen, such states can only exist for definite periods and in simplest of life forms (Hochachka et al. 1973; Herreid 1980; Portner et al. 1985). Intestinal parasites have been said to live without molecular oxygen and intertidal molluscan facultative anaerobes survive for days without it (Ghiretti 1966). Extended life in total anoxia is impossible in more advanced animals. Adaptively, however, in unpropitious ambient conditions, some animals drastically reduce their energy needs by adopting latent (ametabolic) life states, variably termed aestivation, lethargy, hibernation, quiescence and dormancy. Cryptobiosis, a state when life virtually stops is the extreme of such low energy retreats (Hochachka and Guppy 1987). Even in such a state an infinitesimal quantity of energy must, nevertheless, be essential to sustain the integrity of the basic molecular life-support processes such as protein turnover and ion pumping. The presence of oxygen is crucial in maintaining what was appropriately termed by Kleiber (1961) “the fire of life”. Metabolic rate is an expression of intensity and speed of life while death is empirically a state of zero cellular energy production. Energy is crucial to all biological events from molecular and biochemical level to ecological and evolutionary processes. To varying extents, the principal factors which appear to determine the metabolic demands of an organism are size, phylogeny, temperature and physical activity (Bennett 1988a)
    URI
    http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-642-78598-6_4
    http://hdl.handle.net/11295/49638
    Citation
    Advances in Comparative and Environmental Physiology Volume 20, 1994, pp 111-232
    Publisher
    Department of Veterinary Anatomy, University of Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya
    Subject
    Zoology
    Cell Biology
    Ecology
    Biochemistry, general
    Collections
    • Faculty of Agriculture & Veterinary Medicine (FAg / FVM) [275]

    Copyright © 2022 
    University of Nairobi Library
    Contact Us | Send Feedback

     

     

    Useful Links
    UON HomeLibrary HomeKLISC

    Browse

    All of UoN Digital RepositoryCommunities & CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjects

    My Account

    LoginRegister

    Copyright © 2022 
    University of Nairobi Library
    Contact Us | Send Feedback