4.4 Article

Intraspecific variation in the metabolic scaling exponent in ectotherms: Testing the effect of latitudinal dine, ontogeny and transgenerational change in the land snail Cornu aspersum

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cbpa.2013.03.002

Keywords

Metabolism; Allometry; Ectotherms; Ontogeny; Phenotypic plasticity; Molluscs; Local differentiation

Funding

  1. FONDECYT [1090423]
  2. CONICYT Chile
  3. DID-UACH [D-2011-02]

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The strong dependence of metabolic rates on body mass has attracted the interest of ecological physiologists, as it has important implications to many aspects of biology including species variations in body size, the evolution of life history, and the structure and function of biological communities. The great diversity of observed scaling exponents has led some authors to conclude that there is no single universal scaling exponent, but instead it ranges from 2/3 to 1. Most of the telling evidence against the universality of power scaling exponents comes from ontogenetic changes. Nevertheless, there could be other sources of phenotypic variation that influence this allometric relationship at least at the intraspecific level. In order to explore the general concept of the metabolic scaling in terrestrial molluscs we tested the role of several biological and methodological sources of variation on the empirically estimated scaling exponent. Specifically, we measured a proxy of metabolic rate (CO2 production) in 421 individuals, during three generations, in three different populations. Additionally, we measured this scaling relationship in 208 individuals at five developmental stages. Our results suggest that the metabolic scaling exponent at the intraspecific level does not have a single stationary value, but instead it shows some degree of variation across geographic distribution, transgenerational change and ontogenetic stages. The major differences in the metabolic scaling exponent that we found were at different developmental stages of snails, because ontogeny involves increases in size at different rates, which in turn, generate differential energy demands. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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