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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Analysing body condition: mass, volume or density?

TLDR
It is proposed that including these three surrogates of condition will substantially improve the accuracy of non-intrusive estimates of body condition, thus providing more powerful tools with direct application in a wide range of disciplines.
Abstract
1. Body condition (defined as the relative amount of energy reserves in the body) is an animal trait with strong ecological implications. In some animal taxa (e.g. arthropods), the external volume of the body part in which most nutrients are stored (e.g. abdomen) is used interchangeably with body mass to estimate body condition, making the implicit assumption that abdomen residual volume is a good surrogate of residual mass. However, the degree of correlation between these two measures should largely depend on the density of the nutrients stored. 2. We simulated two food-supplemented experimental groups of animals, each storing a slightly different amount of lipids either in their abdomens or in their entire bodies, and explored (i) how different estimates of condition were able to detect fixed differences between the groups; and (ii) how the amount of lipids stored could affect the outcome of non-intrusive measures of condition on a dichotomous variable (e.g. survival, mating success). We found that density body condition (body mass statistically controlled for structural body size and body volume) has much greater power to detect differences between experimental groups or effects on binary response variables than do classic mass/size or volume/size condition indices. 3. Using data on Lycosa tarantula (L.), a burrowing wolf spider, we report dramatic differences among these three indices in their ability to detect sex differences in the effect of feeding treatment on body condition at maturity. In particular, a plot of residual mass against residual volume reflecting nutrient density suggests that poorly fed spiders are nutritionally unbalanced, since well-fed spiders invest in nutrients of very different density. 4. Furthermore, using data on Scathophaga stercoraria (L.), the yellow dung fly, we found that an index of density condition was better at distinguishing condition differences among three populations than were mass or volume condition estimates alone. 5. We propose that including these three surrogates of condition (mass, volume and density) will substantially improve the accuracy of non-intrusive estimates of body condition, thus providing more powerful tools with direct application in a wide range of disciplines.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The evolution of growth trajectories: what limits growth rate?

TL;DR: According to life‐history theory, growth rates are subject to strong directional selection due to reproductive and survival advantages associated with large adult body size, yet growth is commonly observed to occur at rates lower than the maximum that is physiologically possible and intrinsic growth rates often vary among populations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Which body condition index is best

TL;DR: In this article, a broad range of body condition indices were compared to predict body fat mass, percent body fat and residual fat mass in mice Mus musculus, and the performance of these condition indices was compared with the multiple regression of several morphometric variables on body fat.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental Adaptations, Ecological Filtering, and Dispersal Central to Insect Invasions.

TL;DR: This work follows an individual-level insect- and arachnid-centered perspective to assess how the process of invasion is influenced by phenotypic heterogeneity associated with dispersal and stress resistance, and their coupling, across the multiple steps of the invasion process.
Journal ArticleDOI

Moving beyond body condition indices as an estimate of fitness in ecological and evolutionary studies

TL;DR: Replacing body condition indices with more direct measures of body composition – even relatively simple measures – can inform understanding of the physiological mechanisms underlying animal responses in a wide range of behavioural, ecological and evolutionary studies.
Book ChapterDOI

Spider Nutrition: An Integrative Perspective

TL;DR: There is a tremendous opportunity to rapidly advance the understanding of spider nutrition, given a strong foundation in the natural history, behaviour, physiology and ecology of spiders and recent advances in analytical techniques and frameworks for studying nutrition.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Parental investment and sexual selection

TL;DR: The p,cnetics of sex nas now becn clarif ied, and Fishcr ( 1958 ) hrs produccd , n,od"l to cxplarn sex ratios at coDception, a nrodel recently extendcd to include special mccha_ nisms that operate under inbreeding (Hunrilron I96?).
MonographDOI

Categorical data analysis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a generalized linear model for categorical data, which is based on the Logit model, and use it to fit Logistic Regression models.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimating fitness : a comparison of body condition indices

TL;DR: The residual index, with appropriate transformations to achieve homoscedasticity, was the most reliable index because it did not vary with body size, and it is recommended for general use in behavioral studies that require a condition estimate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Restitution of mass–size residuals: validating body condition indices

TL;DR: This paper found no evidence of nonlinear relationships between body mass and body size and showed that residuals from reduced major axis (RMA) and major axis regression performed better than residuals of ordinary least squares (OLS) regression as indices of body condition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mass/length residuals: measures of body condition or generators of spurious results?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify a series of key assumptions underlying the use of this method, each of which is likely to be violated in some or all studies, and explain the poor relationship observed between OLS residuals and more direct measures of condition.
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