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Variable metabolic scaling breaks the law: from ‘Newtonian’ to ‘Darwinian’ approaches

Douglas S. Glazier

2022Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences85 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Life's size and tempo are intimately linked. The rate of metabolism varies with body mass in remarkably regular ways that can often be described by a simple power function, where the scaling exponent ( b , slope in a log-linear plot) is typically less than 1. Traditional theory based on physical constraints has assumed that b is 2/3 or 3/4, following natural law, but hundreds of studies have documented extensive, systematic variation in b . This overwhelming, law-breaking, empirical evidence is causing a paradigm shift in metabolic scaling theory and methodology from ‘Newtonian’ to ‘Darwinian’ approaches. A new wave of studies focuses on the adaptable regulation and evolution of metabolic scaling, as influenced by diverse intrinsic and extrinsic factors, according to multiple context-dependent mechanisms, and within boundary limits set by physical constraints.

Topics & Concepts

ScalingContext (archaeology)Power lawStatistical physicsDarwinismFunction (biology)ExponentVariable (mathematics)Scaling lawMathematicsPhysicsStatisticsMathematical analysisBiologyEvolutionary biologyPhilosophyGeometryLinguisticsPaleontologyPhysiological and biochemical adaptations
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