scientists discover a new way climate change threatens cold-blooded animals
- Written by: Lesley Alton, Research Fellow, Monash University
ShutterstockAll animals need energy to live. They use it to breathe, circulate blood, digest food and move. Young animals use energy to grow, and later in life, to reproduce.
Increased body temperature increases the rate at which an animal uses energy. Because cold-blooded animals rely on the thermal conditions of their environment to regulate...
Read more: scientists discover a new way climate change threatens cold-blooded animals




















