The Mouse-To-Elephant Metabolic Curve: Historical Overview.

Compr Physiol

Department of Physiology, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.

Published: March 2023

Although it is intuitive that large mammals need more food than smaller ones, it is not so obvious that, relative to their body mass, larger mammals consume less than smaller ones. In fact, on a per kg basis, the resting metabolic rate of a mouse is some 50 times higher than that of an elephant. The fact that metabolism could not be proportional to the mass of the animal was suggested by Sarrus and Rameaux in 1838. The first indication that oxygen consumption (or other indices of metabolic rate, Y) related to the animal body mass (M) according to an exponential of the type Y = a · M , where b was about 0.75, was presented by Max Kleiber in 1932. Two years later Samuel Brody had collected sufficient data to construct the first "mouse-to-elephant" metabolic curve. The physiological basis of the relationship has been the object of many hypotheses, often accompanied by a great deal of controversy. This historical essay traces the origin of the mouse-to-elephant metabolic function, recalling the earliest concepts of metabolism and its measurements to understand the body size dependency, which is still one of the most elusive phenomena in comparative physiology. A brief look at the metabolic scaling of nonmammalian organisms will be included to frame the mouse-to-elephant curve into a broader context and to introduce some interesting interpretations of the mammalian function. © 2023 American Physiological Society. Compr Physiol 13:4513-4558, 2023.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cphy.c220003DOI Listing

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