Absolutely not. There is no evidence to support a change in blood viscosity due to hot weather. We do, however build up endurance based on the demands we put on our body. A person who has worked outside in hot weather for a few years will have a significantly higher endurance level/heat tolerance than a person who rarely experiences hot weather. The person who lives in the hot climate will also develop more sensitivity to cold after living in a warm climate for a while. Personally, when I leave Texas for a visit back to my native state of Maine, I tend to feel uncomfortably cold at temperatures I remember playing outside in a t-shirt years ago!
Blood is thinner in a warm climate because:
More water is needed to be carried - when perspiration occurs, water is lost.
More electrolytes are needed in heat - lost from perspiration.
Body activity is higher in the warmer temperatures so more oxygen has to be carried: thinner blood requires less work to move it to extremities.
In a cold climate conservation of heat occurs and vessels contract reducing volume blood vessels can carry.
because you drink more water and thin it out.
no your blood stays the same in all types of weather
yes
Soils are thin and poor in hot wet climates because of the erosion of the loose surface soils.
It is when hot & wet climates produce a thin layer of chemically weathered soil.
They live in cold climates. They prefer living in cold climates, but they can be found in hot climates. Bobcats are just slightly more scarce there.
The rate of chemical weathering in hot wet climates is consider humanity. This is taught in science.
Moderate climates are usually found in hot tempetures.
Soils are thin and poor in hot wet climates because of the erosion of the loose surface soils.
yes, because it is a thin light material
because if they had thick fur, they would die of heat stroke.
blue whale
It is when hot & wet climates produce a thin layer of chemically weathered soil.
People wear cotton in hot climates because the cotton is an absorbing material. In hot climates people sweat a lot and the cotton absorbs that.
mesothermal climates.
Thin and Damp
warm climates like africa, because their fur is too thin for the cold
Fierce Invalids Home from Hot Climates was created in 2000.
People in hot climates do not automatically have long hair. This is simply and untrue statement.
Fierce Invalids Home from Hot Climates has 415 pages.