Abstract
Many studies examine how body size mediates energy use, but few investigate how size simultaneously regulates energy acquisition. Furthermore, rarely energy fluxes are examined while accounting for the role of biotic and abiotic factors in which they are nested. These limitations contribute to an incomplete understanding of how size affects the transfer of energy through individuals, populations, and communities. Here we characterized photosynthesis-irradiance (P-I) curves and per-cell net-energy use for 21 phytoplankton species spanning across four orders of magnitude of size and seven phyla, each measured across six light intensities and four population densities. We then used phylogenetic mixed models to quantify how body size influences the energy turnover rates of a species, and how this changes across environments. Rate-parameters for the P-I curve and net-energy budgets were mostly highly correlated and consistent with an allometric size-scaling exponent of <1. The energy flux ofacell decreased with population density and increased with light intensity, but the effect ofbody size remained constant across all combinations of treatment levels (i.e. no size×populationdensity interaction). The negative effect of population density on photosynthesis and respiration is mostly consistent with an active downregulation of metabolic rates following a decrease in per-cell resource availability, possibly as an adaptive strategy to reduce the minimum requirements of a cell and improve its competitive ability. Also, because an increase in body size corresponds to a less-than-proportional increase in net-energy (i.e. exponent<1), we propose that volume-specific net-energy flux can represent an important cost of evolving larger body sizes in autotrophic single-cell organisms.
Highlights
Body size is perhaps the most definitive traits of a species
The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of body size on net energy flux of species across environmental conditions of light intensity and population density
The only exception was compensation light intensity indicating that the minimum amount of light required to maintain cell energy is similar across a 3 orders of magnitude size range
Summary
Body size is perhaps the most definitive traits of a species. Size defines the rate at which organisms process energy and materials by imposing a suit of physical and chemical constraints on the individual (Calder 1984, Peters 1986). Most individual-level traits are correlated with size, such as growth (West et al 2001), reproductive output (Enquist et al.1999), and longevity (Marba et al 2007). Smaller species may show higher population densities (Damuth 1981, Peters and Wassenberg 1983, Enquist et al 1998, Belgrano et al 2002) and faster rates of population increase (Fenchel 1974, Blueweiss et al.1978, Savage et al 2004) These relationships determine the eco-evolutionary dynamics of a species and are influential for broader community-level processes (Brown et al 2004)
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