
The Living World 8th Edition by George Johnson
النسخة 8الرقم المعياري الدولي: 978-0078024214
The Living World 8th Edition by George Johnson
النسخة 8الرقم المعياري الدولي: 978-0078024214 تمرين 17
Do Big Hearts Beat Faster?
Small animals live at a much faster pace than large animals. They reproduce more quickly and live shorter lives. As a rule, they tend to move about more quickly and so consume more oxygen per unit body weight. Interestingly, small and large mammals have about the same size heart relative to body size (about 0.6% of body mass). But do all mammalian hearts beat at the same rate? the heart of a 7,000-kilogram (a kilogram is 1,000 grams) African bull elephant must push a far greater volume of blood through its body than the heart of a 20-gram mouse, but the elephant is able to do it through much-larger-diameter arteries, which impose far less resistance to the blood's flow. Does the elephant's heart beat faster? Or does the mouse's, in order to deliver more oxygen to its muscles? Or perhaps the mouse's heart beats more slowly because of increased resistance to flow through narrower blood vessels.
The graph to the right displays the pulse rate of a number of mammals of different body sizes (the pulse rate is the number of heartbeats counted per minute, a measure of how rapidly the heart is beating).
Making Inferences
a. The data in the graph, plotted on logarithmic coordinates (that is, the scale rises in powers of 10), fall nicely upon a straight line. How would you expect them to look plotted on linear coordinates?
b. As you walk through the graph from left to right, the line slopes down; this is called a negative slope. What does the negative slope of the line signify?
Small animals live at a much faster pace than large animals. They reproduce more quickly and live shorter lives. As a rule, they tend to move about more quickly and so consume more oxygen per unit body weight. Interestingly, small and large mammals have about the same size heart relative to body size (about 0.6% of body mass). But do all mammalian hearts beat at the same rate? the heart of a 7,000-kilogram (a kilogram is 1,000 grams) African bull elephant must push a far greater volume of blood through its body than the heart of a 20-gram mouse, but the elephant is able to do it through much-larger-diameter arteries, which impose far less resistance to the blood's flow. Does the elephant's heart beat faster? Or does the mouse's, in order to deliver more oxygen to its muscles? Or perhaps the mouse's heart beats more slowly because of increased resistance to flow through narrower blood vessels.
The graph to the right displays the pulse rate of a number of mammals of different body sizes (the pulse rate is the number of heartbeats counted per minute, a measure of how rapidly the heart is beating).
Making Inferences
a. The data in the graph, plotted on logarithmic coordinates (that is, the scale rises in powers of 10), fall nicely upon a straight line. How would you expect them to look plotted on linear coordinates?
b. As you walk through the graph from left to right, the line slopes down; this is called a negative slope. What does the negative slope of the line signify?
التوضيح
The data given here is about the body we...
The Living World 8th Edition by George Johnson
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