Abstract

Whether basal metabolic rate‐body mass scaling relationships have a single exponent is highly discussed, and also the correct statistical model to establish relationships. Here, we aimed (1) to identify statistically best scaling models for 17 mammalian orders, Marsupialia, Eutheria and all mammals, and (2) thereby to prove whether correcting for differences in species’ body temperature and their shared evolutionary history improves models and their biological interpretability. We used the large dataset from Sieg et al. (The American Naturalist 174, 2009, 720) providing species’ body mass (BM), basal metabolic rate (BMR) and body temperature (T). We applied different statistical approaches to identify the best scaling model for each taxon: ordinary least squares regression analysis (OLS) and phylogenetically informed analysis (PGLS), both without and with controlling for T. Under each approach, we tested linear equations (log‐log‐transformed data) estimating scaling exponents and normalization constants, and such with a variable normalization constant and a fixed exponent of either ⅔ or ¾, and also a curvature. Only under temperature correction, an additional variable coefficient modeled the influence of T on BMR. Except for Pholidata and Carnivora, in all taxa studied linear models were clearly supported over a curvature by AICc. They indicated no single exponent at the level of orders or at higher taxonomic levels. The majority of all best models corrected for phylogeny, whereas only half of them included T. When correcting for T, the mathematically expected correlation between the exponent (b) and the normalization constant (a) in the standard scaling model y = a x b was removed, but the normalization constant and temperature coefficient still correlated strongly. In six taxa, T and BM correlated positively or negatively. All this hampers a disentangling of the effect of BM, T and other factors on BMR, and an interpretation of linear BMR‐BM scaling relationships in the mammalian taxa studied.

Highlights

  • For the last two centuries, the relationship between body mass and metabolic rate has been of great interest

  • We aimed to figure out the effect of temperature correction on this built-­in correlation between exponents and normalization constants in order to disentangle the effect of body mass, temperature, phylogeny and other factors on scaling relationships of studied mammalian taxa

  • For our large-­scale analyses on scaling in mammalian basal metabolic rate (BMR), we used the dataset on body mass (BM), BMR and body temperatures (T) published by Sieg et al (2009)

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

For the last two centuries, the relationship between body mass and metabolic rate has been of great interest. We performed linear and quadratic (curvature; Capellini et al, 2010; Clarke et al, 2010; Isaac & Carbone, 2010; Kolokotrones et al, 2010; Müller et al, 2012) least squares regression analyses on log-­log-­ transformed data to identify the best scaling relationship for mammalian orders, Marsupialia, Eutheria, and all mammals. We extended the empirical study of Sieg et al (2009) who reported correlations between exponents and normalization constants when examining heterogeneous taxonomic levels of mammals With this analysis, we aimed to figure out the effect of temperature correction on this built-­in correlation between exponents and normalization constants in order to disentangle the effect of body mass, temperature, phylogeny and other factors on scaling relationships of studied mammalian taxa

| MATERIAL AND METHOD
| DISCUSSION
Method
| CONCLUSIONS
Findings
DATA ACCESSIBILITY

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