Homeostasis, an animal's maintenance of certain internal variables within an acceptable range, particularly in extreme physical environments, has long interested biologists. The desert rat and the camel in the most water-deprived environments, and marine vertebrates in an all-water environment, encounter the same regulatory problem:maintaining adequate Internal fluid balance.

For desert rats and camels, the problem is conservation of water in an environment where standing water is nonexistent, temperature is high, and humidity is low. Despite these handicaps, desert rats are able to maintain the osmotic pressure of their blood, as well as their total body water content, at approximately the same levels as other rats. one countermeasure is behavioral:these rats stay in burrows during 'the hot part of the day, thus avoiding loss of fluid through panting or sweating, which are regulatory mechanisms for maintaining internal body temperature by evaporative cooling. Also, desert rats' kidneys can excrete a urine having twice as high a salt content as sea water.

Camels, on the other hand, rely more on simple endurance. They cannot store water, and their reliance on an entirely unexceptional kidney results in a rate of water loss through renal function significantly higher than that of desert rats. As a result, camels must tolerate losses In Body water of up to thirty percent of their body weight. Nevertheless, camels do rely on a special mechanism to keep water loss within a tolerable range:by sweating and panting only when their body temperature exceeds that which would kill a human, they conserve internal water.

Marine vertebrates experience difficulty with their water balance because though there is no shortage of seawater to drink, they must drink a lot of it to maintain their internal fluid balance. But the excess salts from the seawater must be discharged somehow, and the kidneys of most marine vertebrates are unable to excrete a urine in which the salts are more concentrated than in seawater. Most of these animals have special salt-secreting organs outside the kidney that enable them to eliminate excess salt.


It can be inferred from the passage that the author characterizes the camel's kidney as"entirely unexceptional"(see highlighted text) primarily to emphasize that it


functions much as the kidney of a rat functions

does not aid the camel in coping with the exceptional water loss resulting from the extreme conditions of its environment

does not enable the camel to excrete as much salt as do the kidneys of marine vertebrates

is similar in structure to the kidneys of most mammals living in water-deprived environments

requires the help of other organs in eliminating excess salt

考题讲解

此讲解的内容由AI生成,还未经人工审阅,仅供参考。

正确答案是 B。

文章中出现了“entirely unexceptional”一词,这意味着传说中的骆驼肾脏结构并不异常,而是和大多数哺乳动物的肾脏类似,但它却没有帮助骆驼应付其所处极端环境导致的严重水分流失。因此选项B是正确答案。

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