Two Posts from Badger Run Wildlife Rehab

Ever wonder why birds can land on freezing metal in winter and their feet don’t get stuck to it?

Our fingers will get stuck on cold metal ice cube trays when pulling them out of the freezer. Our tongues freeze to cold metal ala A Christmas Story. That’s because the moisture on our skin freezes in contact with the icy metal.

Birds’ feet are covered with dry scales so there is no moisture to freeze to frigid metal. Birds have no sweat glands and essentially no secretory glands (not zero) so the skin does not secrete moisture through the skin on their feet.

The photo below of an Osprey’s foot shows these scales in the extreme.

Frigid temps can be hard on wildlife. How do they keep those bare feet from freezing? Countercurrent heat exchange.

Basically, the arteries carrying warm blood down to the feet are very close to, if not intertwined with, the veins carrying cooled blood back up to the body and the heart. So, the warm blood in the artery essentially rewarms the blood coming back up the leg’s vein so it does not cool the body’s core temperature.

And birds aren’t the only ones that use countercurrent heat exchange in their extremities to conserve body temperature. Other animals like arctic foxes and wolves use it, too. Deer species, as well. Also, beaver, muskrat, otters, and sea mammals.

  • anon6789@lemmy.worldOP
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    20 hours ago

    I hadn’t heard of that game. The art style looks so fun!

    At the start of a new game, three colonists (referred to as duplicants) find themselves in an asteroid with isolated pockets of breathable atmosphere, with no memory of how they got there.

    Uh oh. Birds do not have a diaphragm to allow them to breath via muscle control and need atmospheric pressure to force air through their respiratory system.

    Thread on bird breathing

    Short animated video on the process