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  2. Opah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opah

    The rete mirabile is a dense network of blood vessels where the warm blood flowing from the heart to the gills transfers its heat to the cold blood returning from the gills. Hence, the rete mirabile prevents warm blood from coming in contact with the cold water (and losing its heat) and also ensures that the blood returning to the internal ...

  3. Ectotherm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ectotherm

    An ectotherm (from the Greek ἐκτός (ektós) "outside" and θερμός (thermós) "heat"), more commonly referred to as a "cold-blooded animal", [1] is an animal in which internal physiological sources of heat, such as blood, are of relatively small or of quite negligible importance in controlling body temperature. [2]

  4. Warm-blooded - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warm-blooded

    Warm-blooded is a term referring to animal species whose bodies maintain a temperature higher than that of their environment. In particular, homeothermic species (including birds and mammals ) maintain a stable body temperature by regulating metabolic processes.

  5. Meet the opah, the first known warm-blooded fish - AOL

    www.aol.com/article/2015/05/15/meet-the-opah-the...

    Researchers say they've discovered the first known fully warm-blooded fish. It's called the opah, or moonfish, and it lives in cold environments deep below the ocean's surface. Scientists say the ...

  6. A deepwater fish joins mammals, birds in the warm-blooded club

    www.aol.com/news/2015-05-14-a-deepwater-fish...

    Move over, mammals and birds, and make room for a fish called the opah in the warm-blooded club. Researchers said in the journal Science on Thursday that this deepwater denizen is the first fish ...

  7. Fish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish

    Most fish are exclusively cold-blooded or ectothermic. However, the Scombroidei are warm-blooded (endothermic), including the billfishes and tunas. [79] The opah, a lampriform, uses whole-body endothermy, generating heat with its swimming muscles to warm its body while countercurrent exchange minimizes heat loss. [80]

  8. Where do SC snakes go in the winter? They don’t ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/where-sc-snakes-winter-don...

    Worms, fish, insects, reptiles and amphibians are all cold-blooded. Mammals and birds are warm-blooded. ... A fish swimming in 40° F water will have a body temperature very near 40° F. The same ...

  9. Physiology of dinosaurs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physiology_of_dinosaurs

    cold-blooded predators need much less food than warm-blooded ones, so a given mass of prey can support far more cold-blooded predators than warm-blooded ones. the ratio of the total mass of predators to prey in dinosaur communities was much more like that of modern and recent warm-blooded communities than that of recent or fossil cold-blooded ...