In general, warm-bloodedness refers to numerous separate categories of
thermoregulation. •
Endothermy is the ability of some creatures to control their body temperatures through internal means such as muscle shivering or increasing their
metabolism. The opposite of endothermy is
ectothermy. •
Homeothermy maintains a stable internal body temperature regardless of external influence and temperatures. The stable internal temperature is often higher than the immediate environment. The opposite is
poikilothermy. The only known living homeotherms are
mammals and
birds, as well as one lizard, the
Argentine black and white tegu. Some non-avian
dinosaurs as well as some extinct reptiles such as
ichthyosaurs,
pterosaurs,
plesiosaurs are believed to have been homeotherms. •
Heterothermy is a physiological term for
animals that vary between self-regulating their body temperature, and allowing the surrounding environment to affect it. In other words, they exhibit characteristics of both
poikilothermy and
homeothermy. •
Gigantothermy is a phenomenon with significance in
biology and
paleontology, whereby large, bulky
ectothermic animals are more easily able to maintain a constant, relatively high
body temperature than smaller animals by virtue of their smaller
surface-area-to-volume ratio. A bigger animal has proportionately less of its body close to the outside environment than a smaller animal of otherwise similar shape, and so it gains heat from, or loses heat to, the environment much more slowly. •
Mesotherm is a type of animal with a
thermoregulatory strategy intermediate to cold-blooded
ectotherms and warm-blooded
endotherms. •
Tachymetabolism maintains a high "resting" metabolism. In essence, tachymetabolic creatures are "on" all the time. Though their resting metabolism is still many times slower than their active metabolism, the difference is often not as large as that seen in
bradymetabolic creatures. Tachymetabolic creatures have greater difficulty dealing with a scarcity of food. == Varieties of thermoregulation ==