Models of Diffusion-Mediated Gas Exchange in Animal Burrows
- 1 November 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in The American Naturalist
- Vol. 112 (988) , 1101-1112
- https://doi.org/10.1086/283349
Abstract
Three mathematical models of gaseous diffusion were employed to investigate the gaseous environments in subaquatic and subterranean animal burrows. The results of these models for simple cylindrical burrows in impermeable media, spherical nest chamber and burrow(s) in impermeable media, and spherical nest chamber and cylindrical burrow(s) in permeable media were evaluated using empirical data, and consideration of the physical and behavioral attributes of fossorial animals which promote forced convection through their burrows. Subaquatic, ectothermic animals in burrows constructed through impermeable media cannot rely upon diffusion to meet their metabolic requirements for O2 utilization and CO2 excretion unless they are of extremely small size. Subterranean ectotherms are predicted to be able to rely upon gaseous diffusion, except when they aggregate together in large numbers. Subterranean endotherms because of their high mass specific metabolic rate, are likely to encounter low concentrations of O2 and high concentrations of CO2 in their burrows. Sensitivity analysis of the model for gas exchange from a nest chamber in a permeable medium indicates that the most significant parameters influencing the gaseous environment are soil porosity, soil moisture (because of its altering soil porosity) and the absolute metabolic requirements of the burrow occupant or occupants. The depth of the nest chamber and the burrow dimensions are of little significance. A non-steady-state approximation for diffusion from a nest chamber in a porous medium demonstrated that the gaseous environment rapidly approaches equilibrium conditions, and the time required to approach to within 10% of the equilibrium values was inversely proportional to the absolute equilibrium gradient.This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Temperature maintenance and CO2 concentration in a swarm cluster of honey bees, Apis melliferaComparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology, 1976
- The Metabolism of Fossorial Rodents: A Study of ConvergenceEcology, 1966
- Minimal utilizable oxygen and the oxygen dissociation curve of blood of rodents.Journal of Applied Physiology, 1966
- Hemoglobin and Oxygen: Affinities in Seven Species of SciuridaeScience, 1965
- Oxygen consumption, thermal conductance, and torpor in the California pocket mouse Perognathus californicusJournal of Cellular and Comparative Physiology, 1965
- Nest Climate Regulation in Honey Bee ColoniesScience, 1961
- The Physical Environment of Soil AnimalsEcology, 1959
- Breath holding after breathing of oxygenJournal of Applied Physiology, 1959
- THE RESPIRATORY GAS EXCHANGE IN TERMOPSIS NEVADENSISThe Biological Bulletin, 1932