Metabolic scaling in insects supports the predictions of the WBE model

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Date
2011-01-20Corporate Author(s)
Pontificia Universidad Javeriana. Facultad de Medicina. Departamento de Ciencias Fisiológicas. Grupo de investigación CANNON
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Artículos
ISSN
0022-1910
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Abstract
The functional association between body size and metabolic rate (BS–MR) is one of the most intriguing issues in ecological physiology. An average scaling exponent of 3/4 is broadly observed across animal and plant taxa. The numerical value of 3/4 is theoretically predicted under the optimized version of West, Brown, and Enquist’s vascular resource supply network model. Insects, however, have recently been proposed to express a numerically different scaling exponent and thus application of the WBE network model to insects has been rejected. Here, we re-analyze whether such variation is indeed supported by a
global deviation across all insect taxa at the order and family levels to assess if specific taxa influence insect metabolic scaling. We show that a previous reported deviation is largely due to the effect of a single insect family (Termitidae). We conclude that the BS–MR relationship in insects broadly supports the core predictions of the WBE model. We suggest that the deviation observed within the termites warrants further investigation and may be due to either difficulty in accurately measuring termite
metabolism and/or particularities of their life history. Future work on allometric scaling should assess the nature of variation around the central tendencies in scaling exponents in order to test if this variation is consistent with core assumptions and predictions of the WBE model that stem by relaxing its secondary optimizing assumptions that lead to the 3/4 exponent.
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https://login.ezproxy.javeriana.edu.co/login?url=https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=edselp&AN=S0022191011000230&lang=es&site=eds-liveSource
Journal of Insect Physiology; Volumen 57 , Páginas 688 - 693 (2011)
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