Animal physiology is the study of how animals work, or more specifically the physical and chemical processes that occur within animals. Examples of these processes include gas exchange, blood and circulation, osmoregulation, digestion, nervous and muscle systems and endocrinology.
In the School of Biological Sciences, animal physiology research is focused on aquatic organisms, from cardiovascular physiology in fish to osmoregulation in freshwater crayfish. Additional areas of interest include exercise physiology in humans and the physiology of Antarctic species.
Examples of research include
Physiological stresses on invertebrates due to human impacts including studies into the live transport of lobsters and acid mine drainage.
Examining the impacts of methylmercury in seafood on behaviour and neural gene expression in a mammalian model, and the potential for pesticides in aquacultural feeds to carry-over into the human food chain.
Ion transport capacities of inanga (whitebait), an endemic amphidromous fish.
New areas of research are developing around emerging contaminants (eg pharmaceuticals and nanoparticles) and pollutant mixtures which we know very little about. Also the sensitivity of New Zealand's native fauna to aquatic toxicants is almost completely uncharacterised.
These research areas incorporate many of the standard biochemical and physiological techniques from mammalian and aquatic toxicology as well as large-scale gene expression screening technologies (microarrays).
United Nations Farms
An animal scientist is commonly referred to as a zoologist. They study animals' behavior, classification, physiology, and conservation in various ecosystems.
Veterinarian, for animal doctoring. Biology for general studies of life (i.e. Marine Biology) It could also be zoology, which is a branch of biology that deals with animals, animal life, their structure, physiology etc.
A zoologist is a scientist who studies animals, their behavior, physiology, genetics, and habitats. They often work in conservation, wildlife management, or research to better understand and protect animal species.
Zoology can be divided into various branches such as ecology, behavior, physiology, genetics, and taxonomy. Ecology focuses on the relationships between animals and their environment, behavior studies animal actions, physiology looks at how animals function, genetics explores inheritance and variation among species, and taxonomy categorizes and names different species.
The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1904 was awarded to Ivan Pavlov in recognition of his work on the physiology of digestion, through which knowledge on vital aspects of the subject has been transformed and enlarged.
"Researchers study the differences between human and animal physiology."
James A. Wilson has written: 'Principles of animal physiology' -- subject(s): Cell physiology, Physiology
Klaus Urich has written: 'Comparative animal biochemistry' -- subject(s): Biochemistry, Comparative Physiology, Physiology, Comparative
Wesley Mills has written: 'A text-book of animal physiology' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Comparative Physiology, Physiology, Comparative, Veterinary physiology 'The action of certain drugs and poisons on the heart of the fish' 'Valedictory address' 'The dog in health and in disease' -- subject(s): Dogs, Diseases, Breeding, Treatment, Dog breeds 'Heredity in relation to education' 'The nature and development of animal intelligence' -- subject(s): Comparative Psychology, Animal intelligence
Not directly, but it's the basis of physiology.
Jo A. Eckstein Straneva has written: 'THERAPEUTIC TOUCH AND IN VITRO ERYTHROPOIESIS' -- subject(s): Animal Physiology Biology, Biology, Animal Physiology, Health Sciences, Nursing, Nursing Health Sciences
All the functions of a living organism or any of its parts. The original meaning of the Greek word Physiology is study of nature. Over the course of time it came to be identified with the functioning of living beings. Thus today we have plant physiology, bacterial physiology, animal physiology and human physiology. In Human Physiology we have molecular physiology, cell physiology, endocrine physiology, cardiovascular physiology, respiratory physiology etc. In Applied Human Physiology we have Space Physiology, Sports Physiology, Exercise Physiology, High Altitude Physiology, Environmental Physiology, Clinical Physiology etc. The concept of Human Physiology is regaining its original meaning in view of the appreciation of the interactions of everything in the external environment, internal environment and also the effects of what happened in the past! Human Physiology therefore must be defined as study of the dynamic interactions amongst everything in Nature with a respect to The Blossoming of Human Life. The branch of the biological sciences dealing with the functioning of organisms. Answer nº two Physiology is the science of the human organs' processes that occur all the time during our life. It's everything which make our organism to function adequately. Human physiology is the science of the mechanical, physical, and biochemical functions of humans, their organs, and the cells of which they are composed.
Actually compounds that are neccessary for animal physiology evolve from chlorophlorous specie due to the trend of natural conservation of energy as animal are unable to make food (autotrophs)and due to the composition of well reserve energy supply in green plant
Bradley Titus Scheer has written: 'Animal physiology'
Human physiology is the science of the mechanical, physical, bioelectrical, and biochemical functions of humans in good health, their organs, and the cells of which they are composed. Physiology focuses principally at the level of organs and systems. Most aspects of human physiology are closely homologous to corresponding aspects of animal physiology, and animal experimentation has provided much of the foundation of physiological knowledge. Anatomy and physiology are closely related fields of study: anatomy, the study of form, and physiology, the study of function, are intrinsically tied and are studied in tandem as part of a medical curriculum.
Malcolm S. Gordon has written: 'Animal function' -- subject(s): Animal ecology, Comparative Physiology, Ecology, Physiology, Comparative, Zoology 'Invasions of the land' -- subject(s): Adaptation (Biology), Evolution (Biology)
E. M. Pantelouris has written: 'The common liver fluke' -- subject(s): Liver flukes 'A handbook of animal physiology' -- subject(s): Comparative Physiology