Environmental Stress: Heat
Heat is an environmental stressor that can be detrimental to the human race, possibly even resulting in death. Although adapting to the cold weather is more difficult psychologically then adapting to extreme heat conditions, more people die from heat then they do from intense cold. Hyperthermia occurs when the body temperature of a human rises to 105-107 degrees Fahrenheit. When an individual experiences this type of heat paired with humidity, the body cannot cool itself by releasing sweat, due to the fact the sweat can no longer evaporate because of the humidity surrounding the individual. However, in dry heat, the sweat is evaporated too quickly, resulting in the body losing the needed water and salts from the body. Hyperthermia can result to death in a matter of a few days, or even as less as 24 hours.
Adaptations
1. Short-term: Evaporative cooling is a physiological mechanism in which the body helps prevent itself from overheating. Perspiration is produced from sweat glands and then evaporates from the surface of the skin.
2. Facultative: Vasodilation is the expansion of blood vessels, permitting increased bloodflow to the skin. This is an involuntary response to warm temperatures, which warms the skin and facilitates radiation of warmth, as a means of cooling. Blushing is an example of this.
3. Developmental: One example of this is body size and proportion, to regulate body temperatures. For warm temperatures, the ideal body shape is linear with long legs and arms, because it promotes heat loss.
4. Cultural: The use of clothing one example of a cultural adaptation. The Tuareg who inhabit the nations of Mali, Algeria Niger and Libya, wear loosely fit clothing and head scarfs, which covers most of their bodies. This allows their skin to be safe from the heat radiation, while also giving air flow to the skin to allow necessary sweat to occur.
Although most of us have the ability to adapt to extreme heat sources, we do not know the cultural aspect of this stressor. I believe cultural adaptation is the most important when it comes to heat. It is very important to know the ways of the people who live in these climates on a day to day basis. If we are ever in a climate or environment of this sort, it is not only important for us to be able to use our natural adaptations, but it is also important to know the cultural aspect of it as well in order for survival.
In researching and conducting this blog post, I can now truly understand why it is much more important to study environmental influences on adaptations, rather than the race of the humans whom reside there. Each and every one of us, regardless of skin color or background, all have the ability of evaporative cooling and vasodilation, which are extremely important tools when dealing with extreme heat temperatures. Although we cannot necessarily change our body type, this is something in which is developed due to a need of survival in a certain climate. In this case, it is a tall and slender body type, which can reduce heat. However, this is not developed due to race, it is developed due to environmental influences. In order to develop any of these adaptations, you do no need to be a certain race, it is a matter of adapting to a certain environment in order to survive. Overall I have come to the conclusion that race does not aid in helping us understand human variation.