Animal behaviour- An overview of Animal Behaviours
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Animal physiology is the scientific study of the life-supporting properties, functions and processes of animals or their parts. The discipline covers key homeostatic processes, such as the regulation of temperature, blood flow and hormones. Animal physiology is the study of how animals work, and investigates the biological processes that occur for animal life to exist. These processes can be studied at various levels of organization from membranes through to organelles, cells, organs, organ systems, and to the whole animal. Animal physiology examines how biological processes function, how they operate under various environmental conditions, and how these processes are regulated and integrated. The study of animal physiology is closely linked with anatomy (i.e., the relationship of function with structure) and with the basic physical and chemical laws that constrain living as well as nonliving systems. Although all animals must function within basic physical and chemical constraints, there is a diversity of mechanisms and processes by which different animals work. A comparative approach to animal physiology highlights underlying principles, and reveals diverse solutions to various environmental challenges. It can reveal similar solutions to a common problem, or modifications of a particular physiological system to function under diverse conditions. The discipline of animal physiology is diverse and here the major areas of research and investigation are outlined.
Animal physiology is the scientific study of the life-supporting properties, functions and processes of animals or their parts. It focuses on how organisms, organ systems, organs, cells, and bio-molecules carry out the chemical or physical functions that exist in a living system. Therefore, the proper studying of animal physiology is crucial for understanding and evaluating underlying biological processes, behavioral states and animal response to different biological, social and environmental stimuli.
In animals, unlike humans, measurement of physiological functions is often preconditioned by a need to use invasive methods or to immobilize them by force, which induces the stress and significantly influences the outcomes of the measurement. On the other hand, anesthesia, for instance, has a profound effect on the heart or brain functions as well as precludes behavioral or mobility studies. How translatable then can be data obtained on animal models to humans?
Here come ECGenie, DigiGait and EMKA Technologies with state-of-the-art solutions. Using non-invasive and telemetric methods you can now easily monitor different physiological functions even in conscious, freely moving animals. Tens of thousands of animals have now been studied this way, advancing understanding of diseases such as Parkinson’s disease, spinal muscular atrophy, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, multiple sclerosis, arthritis, cardiomyopathy and stroke, to name a few. Our journal of Scientific Journal of Veterinary Advances is great platform for the all the researchers who are in the field of veterinary including pathology, microbiology, parasitology, physiology, pharmacology, veterinary medicine.
You can submit your related manuscript to the https://www.sjournals.org/scientific-journal-of-veterinary-advances.html for publication in any type of research work as original papers, review article, and short communication