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Journal ArticleDOI

Size and shape in biology.

Thomas A. McMahon
- 23 Mar 1973 - 
- Vol. 179, Iss: 4079, pp 1201-1204
TLDR
The model proposed here promises useful answers in comparisons of living things on both the microscopic and the gross scale, as part of the growing science of form, which asks precisely how organisms are diverse and yet again how they are alike.
Abstract
Arguments based on elastic stability and flexure, as opposed to the more conventional ones based on yield strength, require that living organisms adopt forms whereby lengths increase as the ⅔ power of diameter. The somatic dimensions of several species of animals and of a wide variety of trees fit this rule well. It is a simple matter to show that energy metabolism during maximal sustained work depends on body cross-sectional area, not total body surface area as proposed by Rubner (1) and many after him. This result and the result requiring animal proportions to change with size amount to a derivation of Kleiber9s law, a statement only empirical until now, correlating the metabolically related variables with body weight raised to the ¾ power. In the present model, biological frequencies are predicted to go inversely as body weight to the ¼ power, and total body surface areas should correlate with body weight to the ⅝ power. All predictions of the proposed model are tested by comparison with existing data, and the fit is considered satisfactory. In The Fire of Life, Kleiber (5) wrote "When the concepts concerned with the relation of body size and metabolic rate are clarified, . . . then compartive physiology of metabolism will be of great help in solving one of the most intricate and interesting problems in biology, namely the regulation of the rate of cell metabolism." Although Hill (23) realized that "the essential point about a large animal is that its structure should be capable of bearing its own weight and this leaves less play for other factors," he was forced to use an oversimplified "geometric similarity" hypothesis in his important work on animal locomotion and muscular dynamics. It is my hope that the model proposed here promises useful answers in comparisons of living things on both the microscopic and the gross scale, as part of the growing science of form, which asks precisely how organisms are diverse and yet again how they are alike.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a metabolic theory of ecology

TL;DR: This work has developed a quantitative theory for how metabolic rate varies with body size and temperature, and predicts how metabolic theory predicts how this rate controls ecological processes at all levels of organization from individuals to the biosphere.
Journal ArticleDOI

A general model for the origin of allometric scaling laws in biology

TL;DR: The model provides a complete analysis of scaling relations for mammalian circulatory systems that are in agreement with data and predicts structural and functional properties of vertebrate cardiovascular and respiratory systems, plant vascular systems, insect tracheal tubes, and other distribution networks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nature’s hierarchical materials

TL;DR: In this paper, the basic principles involved in designing hierarchical biological materials, such as cellular and composite architectures, adapative growth and as well as remodeling, are discussed, and examples that are found to utilize these strategies include wood, bone, tendon, and glass sponges.
Journal ArticleDOI

Left ventricular mass and body size in normotensive children and adults: assessment of allometric relations and impact of overweight.

TL;DR: Normalizations of left ventricular mass for height or body surface area introduce artifactual relations of indexed ventricularmass to body size and errors in estimating the impact of overweight, which are avoided and variability among normal subjects is reduced.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trends in wood density and structure are linked to prevention of xylem implosion by negative pressure

TL;DR: The more drought-tolerant the plant, the more negative the xylem pressure can become without cavitation, and the greater the internal load on thexylem conduit walls, and Dt was correlated with cavitation resistance.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Body size and metabolism

Max Kleiber
TL;DR: In spite of the theoretical weakness of the surface law, the computation of basal metabolism to the unit of the body surface seems at present the most satisfactory method available of equalizing experimental results for differences in the size of experimental animals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Measurement of the respiratory volumes of laboratory animals.

TL;DR: Two valve methods and one modified respirograph method have been used in the investigations described in this paper, and special precautions have been taken in the design of this apparatus so that the pressure against which the animal must be known.