Internal And External Environment

Gbogbo ọrọ náà

Step outside on a harmattan morning in Jos and then again at midday in Lagos in the rains, and the air around you could not be more different: cold and dry, then hot and humid. Yet a healthy goat standing in either place keeps almost exactly the same body temperature, the same blood chemistry, the same steady internal state. That contrast, a constantly shifting outside against a remarkably steady inside, is the starting idea of environmental physiology and the foundation for everything this section of the syllabus will teach.

In this lesson you will learn what farm animal scientists mean by the internal environment and the external environment, the specific factors that make up each one, and how the two relate: the animal's body works continuously to hold its internal environment steady despite an external environment that never stops changing. Grasp this one relationship and the next three lessons, homeostasis, the effects of climate, and how farmers modify the environment, will all make immediate sense.

Ebumnobi

  1. Define the internal environment of a farm animal
  2. Define the external environment of a farm animal
  3. Give examples of external environmental factors affecting farm animals
  4. Explain the relationship between the internal and external environment
  5. Explain how animals respond to changes in their environment

Akọmọ Ojú-ẹkọ

A layer in a poorly ventilated house in Kano can be surrounded by air at 34 ℃ and still be laying eggs normally, while a different bird in the same house, denied water for an afternoon, stops laying within a day. Both birds sit inside the same hot shed, yet only one is struggling. The difference is what is happening inside each bird, not just what is happening around it. Farm managers who understand the boundary between an animal's inside and its outside can predict, and prevent, exactly this kind of failure.

Ayẹwo Ẹkọ

Ekele diri gi maka imecha ihe karịrị na Internal And External Environment. Ugbu a na ị na-enyochakwa isi echiche na echiche ndị dị mkpa, ọ bụ oge iji nwalee ihe ị ma. Ngwa a na-enye ụdị ajụjụ ọmụmụ dị iche iche emebere iji kwado nghọta gị wee nyere gị aka ịmata otú ị ghọtara ihe ndị a kụziri.

Ị ga-ahụ ngwakọta nke ụdị ajụjụ dị iche iche, gụnyere ajụjụ chọrọ ịhọrọ otu n’ime ọtụtụ azịza, ajụjụ chọrọ mkpirisi azịza, na ajụjụ ede ede. A na-arụpụta ajụjụ ọ bụla nke ọma iji nwalee akụkụ dị iche iche nke ihe ọmụma gị na nkà nke ịtụgharị uche.

Jiri akụkụ a nke nyocha ka ohere iji kụziere ihe ị matara banyere isiokwu ahụ ma chọpụta ebe ọ bụla ị nwere ike ịchọ ọmụmụ ihe ọzọ. Ekwela ka nsogbu ọ bụla ị na-eche ihu mee ka ị daa mba; kama, lee ha anya dị ka ohere maka ịzụlite onwe gị na imeziwanye.

  1. The fluid medium inside an animal's body, mainly blood and tissue fluid, in which its cells actually live is called the: A. External environment B. Internal environment C. Ecosystem D. Habitat Answer: B
  2. Which of the following is an EXTERNAL environmental factor acting on a farm animal? A. Blood glucose level B. Body temperature C. Relative humidity of the housing D. Blood pH Answer: C
  3. Which of the following is an INTERNAL environmental variable of a farm animal? A. Air temperature B. Water balance C. Daylength D. Wind Answer: B
  4. The general relationship between an animal's internal and external environment is best described as: A. Both remain fixed and unchanging at all times B. The internal environment is kept stable despite a constantly changing external environment C. The internal environment changes to match the external environment exactly D. The external environment has no effect on the internal environment Answer: B
  5. A goat seeking shade under a tree at midday to avoid direct sunlight is an example of a: A. Physiological response B. Behavioural response C. Managed response D. Genetic response Answer: B