Literature DB >> 24143181

City-scale expansion of human thermoregulatory costs.

Richard W Hill1, Timothy E Muhich, Murray M Humphries.   

Abstract

The physiological maintenance of a stable internal temperature by mammals and birds - the phenomenon termed homeothermy - is well known to be energetically expensive. The annual energy requirements of free-living mammals and birds are estimated to be 15-30 times higher than those of similar-size ectothermic vertebrates like lizards. Contemporary humans also use energy to accomplish thermoregulation. They are unique, however, in having shifted thermoregulatory control from the body to the occupied environment, with most people living in cities in dwellings that are temperature-regulated by furnaces and air conditioners powered by exogenous energy sources. The energetic implications of this strategy remain poorly defined. Here we comparatively quantify energy costs in cities, dwellings, and individual human bodies. Thermoregulation persists as a major driver of energy expenditure across these three scales, resulting in energy-versus-ambient-temperature relationships remarkably similar in shape. Incredibly, despite the many and diversified uses of network-delivered energy in modern societies, the energy requirements of six North American cities are as temperature-dependent as the energy requirements of isolated, individual homeotherms. However, the annual per-person energy cost of exogenously powered thermoregulation in cities and dwellings is 9-28 times higher than the cost of endogenous, metabolic thermoregulation of the human body. Shifting the locus of thermoregulatory control from the body to the dwelling achieves climate-independent thermal comfort. However, in an era of amplifying climate change driven by the carbon footprint of humanity, we must acknowledge the energetic extravagance of contemporary, city-scale thermoregulation, which prioritizes heat production over heat conservation.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24143181      PMCID: PMC3797062          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0076238

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


  15 in total

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Authors:  H ERIKSON; J KROG; K L ANDERSEN; P F SCHOLANDER
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Review 6.  The evolution of endothermy and its diversity in mammals and birds.

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Journal:  Science       Date:  1941-11-07       Impact factor: 47.728

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Authors:  D S Hinds
Journal:  J Mammal       Date:  1973-08       Impact factor: 2.416

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7.  City-scale energetics: window on adaptive thermal insulation in North American cities.

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Review 8.  Hypothalamic control of energy expenditure and thermogenesis.

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Review 9.  Human athletic paleobiology; using sport as a model to investigate human evolutionary adaptation.

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