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Journal ArticleDOI

A new graphic method of describing the growth of animals.

Lionel A. Walford
- 01 Apr 1946 - 
- Vol. 90, Iss: 2, pp 141-147
TLDR
Growth curves, when conventionally plotted as length on age, are difficult to compare and classify; the usual mathematical methods of fitting them, such as the logistic and the Gompertz are rather laborious and incon venient for application to large numbers of individuals.
Abstract
Growth curves, when conventionally plotted as length on age, are difficult to compare and classify. Moreover, the usual mathematical methods of fitting them, such as, the logistic and the Gompertz are rather laborious and incon venient for application to large numbers of individuals. Fortunately, for many purposes, it is unnecessary to describe the whole growth curve; for the part below the inflection point is completed early and the part above the inflection point—the “? self-inhibiting― phase, covers the period of life when differences in growth are likely to be most striking. That phase of the growth curve can be appropriately represented by a straight line, the charac teristics of which can be treated statistically, by the following graphic method: Using arithmetic graph paper, with body length represented along both the x axis and along the y axis, plot length at ages 1, 2, 3, 4, 5@ n on the x axis against length at ages 2, 3, 4, 5, 6. n + 1, respectively, on the y axis. For several species on which I have found published length data, these points fall along a straight line. This line can be regarded as a sort of transformation of the usual growth curve, and in the following discussion I will call it that. The nine examples given in Figures 1—3are based on average lengths of large samples. When lengths of individual specimens are plotted by this method, a straight-line relationship is still obvious, though the points deviate more widely from the linethan when averages are used. These deviationsdoubtless result from several causes, among which random variations in environmental experience and errors of observation readily suggest themselves. For a few species the published growth data failed to produce a straight line. In these cases, the course of growth may differ from that in other animals; or the observed anomalies may reflect some artifactual effect in the data. Among those species for which this “? transformation― results in a straight line, the growth increments corresponding to equal time intervals, for example, be tween years of age (12 —? 11,13 —? 12,14 —? i@, @l,—? i@), have the following inter relations; where 1,, refers to the length at any given age, i.e., at the end of any given time interval :2

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Zur Mathematik des tierischen Wachstums@@@On the mathematics of animal growth: II. Vergleich einiger Wachstumsfunktionen@@@II. Comparison of some growth functions

F. Krüger
TL;DR: In this paper, Bertalanffy and Gompertz were fitted to growth data of tunny (Thunnus thynnus) and North Sea turbot (Scophthalmus maximus).
Journal ArticleDOI

Population Dynamic and Stock Assesment of White Seabream Diplodus sargus (Linnaeus, 1758) in the Coast of North Siani

TL;DR: Fisheries, population dynamic and stock assessment of Diplodus sargus in the coast of North Siani (Eastern Mediterranean, Egypt) and Cohort analysis which represent the estimated values of the population numbers, survivors, natural and fishing mortalities for each year of life of D. sargu were studied.
Journal ArticleDOI

El estudio del paisaje en la Educación Secundaria Obligatoria: una mirada desde los libros de texto de Ciencias Sociales

TL;DR: In this article, a comparative analysis of the landscape contents included in different textbooks that were prepared in the context of both the current educative law (LOMCE) and its predecessor (LOE) is presented.

Biology and population dynamics of the silverbelly Secutor insidiator (Bloch) from Kakinada

TL;DR: The biology and population dynamics of Secutor insidiator from the trawling grounds off Kakinada were studied and the length-weight relationship can be described by the equation: log W = —5.73713 +3.43654 log L (nun).
References
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Book

On Growth and Form

TL;DR: This book is an application of some of the concepts of physical science and sundry mathematical methods to the study of organic form and is like one of Darwin's books, well-considered, patiently wrought-out, learned, and cautious.
Journal ArticleDOI

On Growth and Form

Journal ArticleDOI

Latitude and Relative Growth in the Razor Clam, Siliqua Patula

TL;DR: Current mathematical expressions for the course of growth are discussed and a formula used which emphasises Minot's conception of a growth-rate constantly declining with age is found to graduate the extensive data in clam growth with significant accuracy.