Mammalian Metabolic Allometry: Do Intraspecific Variation, Phylogeny, and Regression Models Matter?

被引:93
|
作者
Sieg, Annette E. [1 ]
O'Connor, Michael P. [1 ]
McNair, James N. [2 ]
Grant, Bruce W. [3 ]
Agosta, Salvatore J. [4 ]
Dunham, Arthur E. [5 ]
机构
[1] Drexel Univ, Dept Biol, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[2] Grand Valley State Univ, Annis Water Resources Inst, Muskegon, MI 49441 USA
[3] Widener Univ, Dept Biol, Chester, PA 19013 USA
[4] Univ Toronto, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Toronto, ON M5S 3G5, Canada
[5] Univ Penn, Dept Biol, Philadelphia, PA 19103 USA
来源
AMERICAN NATURALIST | 2009年 / 174卷 / 05期
关键词
allometry; body size; mammal; metabolic rate; phylogeny; regression; CORRELATED EVOLUTION; CONFIDENCE-INTERVALS; INTERSPECIFIC DATA; MECHANISTIC BASIS; BODY-TEMPERATURE; MUROID RODENTS; SCALING LAWS; BASAL RATE; ECOLOGY; BIOLOGY;
D O I
10.1086/606023
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Power scaling relationships between body mass and organismal traits are fundamental to biology. Compilations of mammalian masses and basal metabolic rates date back over a century and are used both to support and to assail the universal quarter-power scaling invoked by the metabolic theory of ecology. However, the slope of this interspecific allometry is typically estimated without accounting for intraspecific variation in body mass or phylogenetic constraints on metabolism. We returned to the original literature and culled nearly all unique measurements of body mass and basal metabolism for 695 mammal species and (1) phylogenetically corrected the data using the fullest available phylogeny, (2) applied several different regression analyses, (3) resampled regressions by drawing randomly selected species from each of the polytomies in the phylogenetic hypothesis at each iteration, and (4) ran these same analyses independently on separate clades. Overall, 95% confidence intervals of slope estimates frequently did not include 0.75, and clade-specific slopes varied from 0.5 to 0.85, depending on the clade and regression model. Our approach reveals that the choice of analytical model has a systematic influence on the estimated allometry, but irrespective of the model applied, we find little support for a universal metabolic rate-body mass scaling relationship.
引用
收藏
页码:720 / 733
页数:14
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