Title: The burden of food
1The burden of food
2Why animals need energy
- Animals are organized or ordered systems.
- Energy is brought into the system to maintain
that order - Energy definition The capacity to do mechanical
work or more broadly the capacity to increase
order. - Animals are open ordered systems that rely on the
input of energy to maintain that order.
3Figure 6.1 The second law of thermodynamics in
action
4Fundamental of animal energetics 4 energy forms
- Chemical energy energy liberated by the
rearrangement of atoms - Electrical energy produced by the separation of
positive and negative charge. - Mechanical energy produced by organized motion
of the molecules. - Molecular kinetic energy (heat) energy of random
atomic-molecular motion.
5Physiological work increases order
- Chemical energy can be used to do all forms of
physiological work (totipotent). - Electrical and mechanical energy can be used for
some physiological work. - Animals cannot use heat to do any form of
physiological work in themselves. - Work produced by heat requires a temperature
difference.
6Transformation of high-grade energy
- Efficiency of energy transmission is less than 1.
- 70 of energy released from glucose is
incorporated into ATP bonds. 30 is lost in heat - 35-30 of the energy released from ATP is used in
muscular contraction.
7The flow of energy in animals
- Flow of energy starts as ingested chemical
energy. - Egested chemical bond energy is fecal chemical
energy. - Ingested energy that is assimilated into the
cells is absorbed chemical energy and this energy
is available to perform physiological work. - Ingested energy-egested energyabsorbed chemical
energy
8The 3 major physiological functions
- Biosynthesis
- Produce chemicals with chemical-energy content,
i.e. ATP. - Produce new cells and tissues.
- Produce organic compounds that are exported from
the body during an animals life.
9The 3 major physiological functions
- Maintenance functions maintain the integrity of
the body and this energy is entirely degraded to
heat. - Circulation, respiration, nervous coordination,
gut motility, tissue repair. - Mechanical work in the body is internal work
10The 3 major physiological functions
- Generation of external work is the application of
forces to objects or forces outside the body. - Energy is transmitted to the environment and is
sometimes converted into potential energy.
11Figure 6.2 The uses of energy by an animal
12Metabolic rate
- The metabolic rate is the rate of energy
consumption or the rate at which an animal
converts chemical energy into heat and external
work. - Metabolic rate affects how much food needs to be
ingested. - Metabolic rate can be measured to quantitatively
determine total activity of all physiological
mechanisms. - Metabolic rate measures the drain produced by an
animal on its ecosystem - The rate of degradation of chemical energy or
organic compounds.
13Measurement of metabolic rate
- Metabolic rates can be measured using a direct
calorimeter. - Traditional unit of measurement is calorie, which
is the unit needed to increase 1g of water 1oC, a
kilocalorie is kcal or C. - Measurement of energy is joule (J). A watt is 1
J/s. - 1 cal4.186J
- Indirect measurements of metabolic rate use the
rate of O2 consumption.
14Fig. 6.4 Lavoisiers direct calorimeter
15Indirect calorimeter
16(No Transcript)
17Injestion of food and metabolic rate
- The increase in metabolic rate caused by food
ingestion is called specific dynamic action (SDA)
or the heat increment of feeding. - Magnitude of the increase is the total excess
metabolic heat produced by the meal. - The SDA is proportional to the food eaten and it
rises after food absorption, particularly
proteins. - Diet can induce chronic changes in metabolic
ratediet induced thermogenesis (DIT).
18Figure 6.5 Specific dynamic action (Part 1)
- Specific dynamic action is the calorigenic effect
of ingested food.
19Figure 6.5 Specific dynamic action (Part 2)
- SDA is proportional to the amount of food eaten
20Basal metabolic rate (BMR) and standard metabolic
rate (SMR)
- BMR applies to homeotherms and is the animals
metabolic rate while it is in its - Thermoneutral zonethe temperature zone within
which metabolic rate is minimal - Fasting
- Resting
- SMR applies to poikilotherms and is the animals
metabolic rate while it is - Fasting
- Resting
- Routine metabolic rate is used by fish
physiologist because of the constant motion of
fish.
21Figure 6.6 The effect of body size on weekly
food requirements
- The energy needs of an organism are NOT
proportional to their body size.
Ratio5.83
Ratio0.34
22Figure 6.7 BMR as a function of body weight in
various species of placental mammals
23Figure 6.8 Weight-specific BMR as a function of
body weight in various species
The relations can be expressed as M (total BMR or
SMR)aWb where W is body weight and a and b are
constants derived from the fitted curve. The
value of b is typically 0.7. This equation is an
allometric equation.
24Figure 6.9 Weight-specific metabolic rate as a
function of body weight in four groups of
vertebrates
25Figure 6.10 Metabolic rate and body weight are
related linearly on loglog coordinates (Part 1)
26Figure 6.10 Metabolic rate and body weight are
related linearly on loglog coordinates (Part 2)
27Physiological and ecological implications of
metabolic rate-body weight
- Cellular properties differ allometrically,
particularly in reference to density of
mitochondria. - Resting heart rate and breathing rates differs
allometrically. - The structure of ecosystems is affected by
allometric relations. - Ex a square kilometer can support 95kg of
warthogs, or 460kg of zebras, or 1250kgs of
elephants. - Environmental pollutants are concentrated in
animals with a higher weight specific metabolic
rate. - Catabolism and excretion are higher in small
species.
28(No Transcript)
29Fig. 6.1 Proportionality of heart to body size
horse
cat
mouse
30Figure 6.12 Herbivores of different body sizes
coexisting on an African grassland
31(No Transcript)
32Theories to explain the allometric relation
between metabolic rate and body weight
- Rubners surface law Surface areas increase only
as the 2/3 power of their volume. - The ratio of surface area to volume declines as
organisms increase in size
33Rubners Logic
- Rubners logic rested on data from homeotherms
- Homeotherms tend to lose body heat to the
environment - Heat loss is proportional to the animals
body-surface. - Small homeotherms with a large surface area to
volume lose heat more rapidly. - An increase in metabolic processes is required
for small homeotherms to maintain body
temperature.
34- Problems with Rubners surface law
- Data contradicted the lawthe law predicts an
exponent of 0.67 and the exponent is
significantly higher 0.7 - Allometric relationships are also found among
poikilotherms and the law only accounts for
homeotherms. - The explanation for the allometric relationship
between metabolism and body weight should include
all organisms
35Figure 6.13 Theories to explain the allometric
relation between metabolic rate and body weight
(1)
- Allometric relations are the result of key
internal transport systems, which bring in the
raw materials of metabolism. Rates of transport
are constrained by geometry.
36Figure 5.12 Theories to explain the allometric
relation between metabolic rate and body weight
(2)
- Multiple causes theory states that the rate of
any major processes depends on the interaction
between multiple underlying processes.
37Energetic efficiency
- Lipids are twice as high in energy density as
proteins and carbohydrates. - The efficiency of energy absorption absorbed
energy/ingested energy - Absorbed energy is available for metabolism
- Not all energy is absorbed.
- Growing animals accumulate chemical-bond energy
in their body.
38Figure 6.14 Net growth efficiency during each
year of life in Pacific sardines (Sardinops sagax)
39- Energy is the common currency of life.
- Most processes can be expressed in units of
energy. - The impact of organisms on the ecosystem can be
determined by examining energy costs of
organisms. - Energy of mental effort?
- Resting brain consumes 20 of the energy
absorbed. - Francis Benedict determined the working brain did
not consume more energy. - is this still a good study?