Allometric and ecological relationships of ventricle and liver mass in anuran amphibians

被引:24
|
作者
Withers, PC [1 ]
Hillman, SS
机构
[1] Univ Western Australia, Dept Zool, Nedlands, WA 6907, Australia
[2] Portland State Univ, Dept Biol, Portland, OR 97207 USA
关键词
burrowing; dehydration;
D O I
10.1046/j.1365-2435.2001.00495.x
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
1, There is an isometric relationship for allometry of ventricle mass (slope = 0.952) and liver mass (slope = 1.027) and phylogenetic correlations of ventricle and liver mass for museum specimens of 42 species of Australian frogs. 2, There was a strong relationship for ventricle mass with body mass, phylogeny and dehydration tolerance, but not habit, body shape or environmental variables. The relatively large ventricle of more dehydration-tolerant species may also be associated with a higher metabolic scope for activity. There was a strong relationship for liver mass with body mass, phylogeny, habit (burrowing, terrestrial, arboreal), body shape and some environmental variables, but not dehydration tolerance. For burrowing frogs, a relatively large liver is presumably important because it is an energy store during long periods of dormancy and is a source of amino acids for cocoon formation or urea synthesis. For arboreal frogs, a small liver might reduce the cost of transport by limiting body mass, and allow a more elongate shape. 3, Relative ventricle mass of museum specimens is representative of values for field-collected frogs. Relative liver mass is higher for museum specimens; this might be an artefact of museum preservation and/or reflect seasonal or geographic variation.
引用
收藏
页码:60 / 69
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Allometric and mass relationships of Betula populifolia in a naturally assembled urban brownfield: implications for carbon modeling
    Dahle, Gregory A.
    Gallagher, Frank J.
    Gershensond, Dimitry
    Schaefer, Karina V. R.
    Grabosky, Jason C.
    URBAN ECOSYSTEMS, 2014, 17 (04) : 1147 - 1160
  • [32] Modelling the metabolism: allometric relationships between total daily energy expenditure, body mass, and height
    Diana M. Thomas
    Krista Watts
    Sara Friedman
    Dale A. Schoeller
    European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2019, 73 : 763 - 769
  • [33] Allometric and mass relationships of Betula populifolia in a naturally assembled urban brownfield: implications for carbon modeling
    Gregory A. Dahle
    Frank J. Gallagher
    Dimitry Gershensond
    Karina V. R. Schäfer
    Jason C. Grabosky
    Urban Ecosystems, 2014, 17 : 1147 - 1160
  • [34] ALLOMETRIC RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN LEAF AND INFLORESCENCE MASS IN THE GENUS PROTEA (PROTEACEAE) - AN ANALYSIS OF THE EXCEPTIONS TO THE RULE
    LEMAITRE, DC
    MIDGLEY, JJ
    FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, 1991, 5 (04) : 476 - 484
  • [35] Modelling the metabolism: allometric relationships between total daily energy expenditure, body mass, and height
    Thomas, Diana M.
    Watts, Krista
    Friedman, Sara
    Schoeller, Dale A.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NUTRITION, 2019, 73 (05) : 763 - 769
  • [36] Scaling of left ventricular mass to body size: Allometric analysis of the relationships to body composition variables using MRI
    Myerson, SG
    George, K
    Birch, K
    World, M
    Pennell, DJ
    CIRCULATION, 2001, 104 (17) : 639 - 640
  • [37] RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN RELATIVE MASS OF THE SKELETON, ENDOSTEAL RESORPTION, HABITAT AND PRECISION OF AGE-DETERMINATION IN RANID AMPHIBIANS
    LECLAIR, RJ
    ANNALES DES SCIENCES NATURELLES-ZOOLOGIE ET BIOLOGIE ANIMALE, 1990, 11 (04): : 205 - 208
  • [38] Allometric relationships among body mass, MUZZLE-tail length, and tibia length during the growth of Wistar rats
    Rocha de Santiago, Hildemberg Agostinho
    De Pierro, Lucas Rodolfo
    Reis, Rafael Menezes
    Ricardo Engracia Caluz, Antonio Gabriel
    Ribeiro, Victor Barbosa
    Volpon, Jose Batista
    ACTA CIRURGICA BRASILEIRA, 2015, 30 (11) : 743 - 748
  • [40] Allometric relationships between lamina area, lamina mass and petiole mass of 93 temperate woody species vary with leaf habit, leaf form and altitude
    Li, Guoyong
    Yang, Dongmei
    Sun, Shucun
    FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, 2008, 22 (04) : 557 - 564