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Journal article

Body shape shifting during growth permits tests that distinguish between competing geometric theories of metabolic scaling

Edited by Marshall, Dustin

From

National Institute of Aquatic Resources, Technical University of Denmark1

Centre for Ocean Life, National Institute of Aquatic Resources, Technical University of Denmark2

Juniata College3

University of Liverpool4

Metabolism fuels all of life’s activities, from biochemical reactions to ecological interactions. According to two intensely debated theories, body size affects metabolism via geometrical influences on the transport of resources and wastes. However, these theories differ crucially in whether the size dependence of metabolism is derived from material transport across external surfaces, or through internal resource-transport networks.

We show that when body shape changes during growth, these models make opposing predictions. These models are tested using pelagic invertebrates, because these animals exhibit highly variable intraspecific scaling relationships for metabolic rate and body shape. Metabolic scaling slopes of diverse integument-breathing species were significantly positively correlated with degree of body flattening or elongation during ontogeny, as expected from surface area theory, but contradicting the negative correlations predicted by resource-transport network models.

This finding explains strong deviations from predictions of widely adopted theory, and underpins a new explanation for mass-invariant metabolic scaling during ontogeny in animals and plants

Language: English
Year: 2014
Pages: 1274-1281
ISSN: 14610248 and 1461023x
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1111/ele.12334

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