Veins
carrying warm blood from the heart to the gills interweave with arteries bringing colder, oxygen - rich blood from respiration.
Vessels
carrying warm blood transfer its heat to the cold blood in vessels that comes back from the extremities.
Not exact matches
And new research shows how genetic alterations in this odd - colored
blood have helped the octopus colonize the world's wide oceans — from the deep, freezing Antarctic to the
warm equatorial tropics.The iron - based protein (hemoglobin) that
carries oxygen in the
blood for us red -
blooded vertebrates becomes ineffective when faced with low - oxygen levels.
With the
warm up exercises you actually pump
blood which
carries oxygen and nutrients into lower leg muscles.
Specification points covered are: Paper 2 Topic 1 (4.5 - homeostasis and response) 4.5.1 - Homeostasis (B5.1 lesson) 4.5.3.2 - Control of
blood glucose concentration (B5.1 lesson) 4.5.2.1 - Structure and function (B5.2 lesson) Required practical 7 - plan and
carry out an investigation into the effect of a factor on human reaction time (B5.2 lesson) 4.5.3.1 - Human endocrine system (B5.6 lesson) 4.5.3.4 - Hormones in human reproduction (B5.10 lesson) 4.5.3.5 - Contraception (B5.11 lesson) 4.5.3.6 - The use of hormones to treat infertility (HT only)(B5.12 lesson) 4.5.3.7 - Negative feedback (HT only)(B5.13 lesson) Paper 2 topic 2 (4.6 - Inheritance, variation and evolution) 4.6.1.1 - sexual and asexual reproduction (B6.1 lesson) 4.6.1.2 - Meiosis (B6.1 lesson) 4.6.1.4 - DNA and the genome (B6.3 lesson) 4.6.1.6 - Genetic inheritance (B6.5 lesson) 4.6.1.7 - Inherited disorders (B6.6 lesson) 4.6.1.8 - Sex determination (B6.5 lesson) 4.6.2.1 - Variation (B6.9 lesson) 4.6.2.2 - Evolution (B6.10 lesson) 4.6.2.3 - Selective breeding (B6.11 lesson) 4.6.2.4 - Genetic engineering (B6.11 lesson) 4.6.3.4 - Evidence for evolution (B6.16 lesson) 4.6.3.5 - Fossils (B6.16 lesson) 4.6.3.6 - Extinction (B6.16 lesson) 4.6.3.7 - Resistant bacteria (B6.17 lesson) 4.6.4.1 - classification of living organisms (B6.18 lesson) Paper 2 topic 3 (4.7 - Ecology 4.7.1.1 - Communities (B7.1 lesson) 4.7.1.2 - Abiotic factors (B7.1 lesson) 4.7.1.3 - Biotic factors (B7.1 lesson) 4.7.1.4 — Adaptations (B7.2 lesson) 4.7.2.1 - Levels of organisation (feeding relationships + predator - prey cycles)(B7.3 lesson) 4.7.2.1 - Levels of organisation (required practical 9 - population sizes)(B7.4 lesson) 4.7.2.2 - How materials are cycled (B7.5 lesson) 4.7.3.1 - Biodiversity (B7.7 lesson) 4.7.3.6 - Maintaining Biodiversity (B7.7 lesson) 4.7.3.2 - Waste management (B7.9 lesson) 4.7.3.3 - Land use (B7.9 lesson) 4.7.3.4 - Deforestation (B7.9 lesson) 4.7.3.5 - Global
warming (B7.9 lesson)
Toxoplasma gondii (T. gondii) is a parasite
carried by cats that can infect any
warm -
blooded mammal.
The minute any
warm -
blooded creature — including you — leaves your house, he or she becomes fair game for fleas or flea eggs, which can be
carried in on shoes or via a breeze through an open window.
Fact: Actually, most
warm -
blooded mammals, including cats, bats, skunks and ferrets, can
carry rabies.
The cat -
carried parasite can infect any
warm -
blooded species, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates more than 60 million people in the U.S. may have it.
All
warm -
blooded mammals can
carry the rabies virus but it's most often found in raccoons, skunks, and bats.