Control of metabolic rate is a hidden variable in the allometric scaling of homeotherms.

J Exp Biol

Departamento de Fisiologia, Instituto de Biociências, Universidade de São Paulo, Rua do Matão tr. 14, 321, CEP: 05508-900, São Paulo/SP, Brazil.

Published: May 2005

AI Article Synopsis

  • The paper examines the historical debate surrounding the relationship between standard metabolic rate (SMR) and body mass in homeotherms, revealing a hidden assumption that SMR represents a stable minimum.
  • It introduces a minimalist control model to show how short-term regulatory mechanisms can lead to fluctuations in body temperature (Tb) and metabolic rate (B) rather than a stable SMR, particularly in smaller animals.
  • The findings suggest that using allometric equations to relate metabolic rate to body size may be misleading, as they fail to account for size-dependent variations in metabolic control.

Article Abstract

The allometric scaling exponent of the relationship between standard metabolic rate (SMR) and body mass for homeotherms has a long history and has been subject to much debate. Provided the external and internal conditions required to measure SMR are met, it is tacitly assumed that the metabolic rate (B) converges to SMR. If SMR does indeed represent a local minimum, then short-term regulatory control mechanisms should not operate to sustain it. This is a hidden assumption in many published articles aiming to explain the scaling exponent in terms of physical and morphological constraints. This paper discusses the findings of a minimalist body temperature (Tb) control model in which short-term controlling operations, related to the difference between Tb and the set-point temperatures by specific gains and time delays in the control loops, are described by a system of differential equations of Tb, B and thermal conductance. We found that because the gains in the control loops tend to increase as body size decreases (i.e. changes in B and thermal conductance are speeded-up in small homeotherms), the equilibrium point of the system potentially changes from asymptotically stable to a centre, transforming B and Tb in oscillating variables. Under these specific circumstances the very concept of SMR no longer makes sense. A series of empirical reports of metabolic rate in very small homeotherms supports this theoretical prediction, because in these animals B seems not to converge to a SMR value. We conclude that the unrestricted use of allometric equations to relate metabolic rate to body size might be misleading because metabolic control itself experiences size effects that are overlooked in ordinary allometric analysis.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jeb.01421DOI Listing

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