Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
abstract, introduction, methods, results, discussion, literature cited -…
abstract
background
1-2 sentences
the mass-specific BMR for birds and mammals are not the same; Aves have a higher mass-specific BMR average than mammals
if birds have a lower mass specific metabolic rate than mammals, then amphibians will have a lower mass specific metabolic rate then birds.
-
methods
brief no details
-
type of experiemnt: field, lab, actual, theoretical = physical description of different spieces
-
-
-
introduction
unknown/problem
unanswered questions
if birds have a lower mass specific metabolic rate than mammals, then amphibians will have a lower mass specific metabolic rate then birds
to interpret the relationship between the size of mammals and aves with their (body mass [g]) and metabolic rate (watts)
-
question & hypothesis
know the difference
-
if birds have a lower mass specific metabolic rate than mammals, then amphibians will have a lower mass specific metabolic rate then birds. = amphibians had a much smaller mass specific metabolic rate average than Aves
being able to determine the energy cost of living and being able to compare the activity among the different species.
-
methods
-
procedures
sufficient detail for someone to replicate your experiment, but NOT step by step.
to summarize, interpret and graph the relationship between the size of an animal (body mass [g]) and metabolic rate (watts)
-
-
-
-
results
-
-
figures
graphs, illustrations, photographs
-
-
-