Zoology, 8th Edition (Miller)Chapter 28:
Temperature and Body Fluid RegulationSuggested ReadingsBOOKS - Hochachka, P., and Somero, G. 1984. Biochemical Adaptations. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.
- Rankin, J. C., and Davenport, J. 1981. Animal Osmoregulation. New York: John Wiley & Sons.
ARTICLES - Beauchamp, G.K. 1987. The human preference for excess salt. Scientific American, July.
- Carey, F. G. 1983. Fishes with warm bodies. Scientific American, February.
- Coutant, C. 1986. Thermal niches of striped bass. Scientific American, February.
- Degabriele, R. 1980. The physiology of the koala. Scientific American, July.
- Eastman, J., and DeVries, A. L. 1986. Antarctic fishes. Scientific American, November.
- Flam, F. 1989. Antifreezes in fish work quite similarly. Science News, June 30.
- French, A. R. 1988. The patterns of mammalian hibernation. American Scientist 76(6): 568-75.
- Heinrich, B. 1989. The raven's feast. Natural History, February.
- ---. 1987. Thermoregulation in winter moths. Scientific American, March.
- Irving, J. 1966. Adaptations to cold. Scientific American, January.
- Lee, R. E. 1989. Insect cold-hardiness: To freeze or not to freeze. BioScience 39: 308-13.
- Mommsen, T., and Walsh, P. 1989. Evolution of urea synthesis in vertebrates. Science 243: 72-75.
- Ruppert, E., and Smith, P. 1988. The functional organization of filtration. Scientific American, March.
- Schmidt-Nielsen, B. 1988. Excretory mechanisms as examples of the principle "The whole is greater than the sum of its parts." Physiol. Zool. 61: 312-21.
- Schmidt-Nielsen, K. 1981. Countercurrent systems in animals. Scientific American, May.
- Storey, K., and Syorey, J. 1990. Frozen and alive. Scientific American, December
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