thermoneutrality
Thermoneutrality is the physiological state in which an endothermic organism can maintain a stable core body temperature with minimal metabolic energy, achieved within a specific ambient temperature range known as the thermoneutral zone (TNZ). Within the TNZ, heat loss and heat production balance through sensible heat exchange with the environment, and the resting metabolic rate remains at its minimum for thermoregulation.
The TNZ is bounded by a lower critical temperature (LCT) and an upper critical temperature (UCT). Below
Physiological responses outside the TNZ include shivering and non-shivering thermogenesis in cold conditions; sweating and evaporative
The concept is used in physiology, environmental design, and clinical contexts (for example, anesthesia and fever