Abstract
ABSTRACTAim We test the âenergetic equivalence ruleâ (EER) â the idea that the amount of energy used by a population per unit area per unit time is independent of body mass â in meioâinvertebrate communities from a series of natural, multitrophic aquatic ârock poolâ microcosms. Our study represents the first rigorous test of the EER at local scales of observation in a community of naturally coexisting species.Location Discovery Bay, Jamaica.Method We estimated population energy use (PEU) for every occurrence of every species of meioâinvertebrate fauna found in each of 29 microcosms (233 observations of 31 species) using estimates of population density obtained in January 2005 in combination with published metabolismâmass relations for closely related taxa.Results In the rock pool system as a whole, population density decreased (ancova: b = â0.38 (â0.55 to â0.19), r2 = 0.19, P < 0.001) and PEU increased with body mass (ancova: b = 0.55 (0.36â0.73), r2 = 0.28, P < 0.001).Main conclusions The positive PEUâbody mass relation found here suggests that larger organisms are energetically dominant and points to the importance of sizeâstructured competition in these systems. Our results contrast those obtained in the few other previously published tests of the EER and challenge the idea that all species use similar amounts of energy regardless of their size.
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