公共英语PETS考试精选80篇背诵范文含翻译(五十)
来源:优易学  2011-4-29 6:55:13   【优易学:中国教育考试门户网】   资料下载   外语书店

Cells and Temperature
  Cells cannot remain alive  outside certain limits of temperature, and  much narrower limits mark the boundaries  of effective functioning.  
  Enzyme systems of mammals and birds are most efficient only within a narrow range around 37  ℃; a departure of a few degrees from this value seriously impairs  their  functioning. 
  Even though cells can survive wider fluctuations,  the integrated actions of bodily systems are impaired.  
  Other animals have a wider tolerance for changes of bodily temperature. For centuries it has been recognized that mammals and birds differ from other animals in the way they regulate body  temperature. Ways of characterizing  the difference have become more accurate and meaningful over time, but popular terminology still reflects the old division into "warm blooded" and "cold blooded" species; warm-blooded included mammals and birds whereas all other creatures were considered cold-blooded. 
  As more species were studied, it became evident that this classification was inadequate. A fence lizard or a desert iguana -- each cold-blooded -- usually has a body temperature only a degree or two below that of humans and so is not cold. 
  Therefore the next distinction was made between animals that maintain a constant body temperature, called  homeotherms, and those whose body temperature varies with their environment, called poikilotherms. But this classification also proved inadequate, because  among mammals there are many that vary their body temperatures during hibernation.
   Furthermore, many invertebrates that live in the depths of the ocean never experience a change in the chill of the deep water, and their body temperatures remain constant.

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