bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory),
Journal Year:
2022,
Volume and Issue:
unknown
Published: Aug. 22, 2022
Abstract
Understanding
how
growth
and
reproduction
will
adapt
to
changing
environmental
conditions
is
a
fundamental
question
in
evolutionary
ecology,
but
predicting
the
responses
of
specific
taxa
challenging.
Analyses
physiological
effects
climate
change
upon
life
history
evolution
rarely
consider
alternative
hypothesized
mechanisms,
such
as
size-dependent
foraging
risk
predation,
simultaneously
shaping
optimal
patterns.
To
test
for
interactions
between
these
we
embedded
state-dependent
energetic
model
an
ecosystem
size-spectrum
ask
whether
prey
availability
(foraging)
predation
experienced
by
individual
fish
can
explain
observed
diversity
histories
fishes.
We
found
that
asymptotic
emerged
from
size-based
reproductive
mortality
patterns
context
food
web
interactions.
While
more
productive
ecosystems
led
larger
body
sizes,
temperature
on
metabolic
costs
had
only
small
size.
validate
our
model,
ran
it
abiotic
scenarios
corresponding
ecological
lifestyles
three
tuna
species,
considering
environments
included
seasonal
variation
temperature.
successfully
predicted
realistic
growth,
reproduction,
all
species.
individuals
grew
when
varied
seasonally
spawning
was
restricted
part
year
(corresponding
their
migration
temperate
tropical
waters).
Growing
advantageous
because
opportunities
were
constrained.
This
mechanism
could
gigantism
tunas.
Our
approach
addresses
well
processes
offers
promising
understand
life-history
ocean
conditions.
Science,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
384(6697), P. 763 - 767
Published: May 16, 2024
Reproduction
includes
two
energy
investments-the
in
the
offspring
and
expended
to
make
them.
The
former
is
well
understood,
whereas
latter
unquantified
but
often
assumed
be
small.
Without
understanding
both
investments,
true
costs
of
reproduction
are
unknown.
We
present
a
framework
for
estimating
total
by
combining
data
on
content
(direct
costs)
metabolic
load
bearing
them
(indirect
costs).
find
that
direct
typically
represent
smaller
fraction
reproduction.
Mammals
pay
highest
reproductive
(excluding
lactation),
~90%
which
indirect.
Ectotherms
expend
less
overall,
live-bearing
ectotherms
higher
indirect
compared
with
egg-layers.
show
demands
exceed
standard
assumptions.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
379(1896)
Published: Jan. 8, 2024
Metabolic
cold
adaptation,
or
Krogh's
rule,
is
the
controversial
hypothesis
that
predicts
a
monotonically
negative
relationship
between
metabolic
rate
and
environmental
temperature
for
ectotherms
living
along
thermal
clines
measured
at
common
temperature.
Macrophysiological
patterns
consistent
with
rule
are
not
always
evident
in
nature,
experimentally
evolved
responses
to
have
failed
replicate
such
patterns.
Hence,
may
be
sole
driver
of
observed
variation
rate.
We
tested
temperature,
as
energy
demand,
interacts
nutrition,
supply,
shape
evolution
produce
pattern
resembling
rule.
To
do
this,
we
lines
Drosophila
melanogaster
18,
25
28°C
on
control,
low-calorie
low-protein
diets.
Contrary
our
prediction,
no
effect
alone
interacting
adult
female
male
rates.
Moreover,
support
was
only
females
lower
temperatures.
We,
therefore,
hypothesize
arises
from
consequences
environment-specific
life-history
optimization,
rather
than
because
direct
This
article
part
theme
issue
‘The
evolutionary
significance
rates’.
Physiology,
Journal Year:
2023,
Volume and Issue:
38(6), P. 266 - 274
Published: Sept. 12, 2023
Most
explanations
for
the
relationship
between
body
size
and
metabolism
invoke
physical
constraints;
such
are
evolutionarily
inert,
limiting
their
predictive
capacity.
Contemporary
approaches
to
metabolic
rate
life
history
lack
pluralism
of
foundational
work.
Here,
we
call
reforging
lost
links
optimization
physiology.
Frontiers in Marine Science,
Journal Year:
2025,
Volume and Issue:
12
Published: March 31, 2025
The
longevity
(lifespan)
and
growth
rates
of
a
given
species
provide
the
basis
for
estimating
its
contributions
to
secondary
production
energy
flow
in
an
ecosystem,
guiding
management
decisions,
determining
recovery
times
after
disturbances.
For
brittle
stars,
class
echinoderms
that
dominate
megabenthos
various
marine
systems
due
their
often
large
populations,
including
those
on
Arctic
soft
bottom
shelves,
information
can
be
estimated
through
bands
ossicles
(arm
bones).
Here,
we
maximum
life
span,
age
distribution,
rate
common,
endemic
star,
Ophiopleura
borealis
,
from
northern
Barents
Sea.
We
counted
trawl-caught
specimens
using
scanning
electron
microscope
images
innermost
arm
80
spanning
known
size
range.
These
counts
were
corrected
overgrowth
earliest
bands,
parameters
common
models.
appeared
as
alternating
layers
dense
less
lines
stereom
ossicle
fossae.
band
count
was
39,
which
infer
reflecting
years.
This
estimate
is
higher
than
most
other
studied
polar
species.
Most
individuals
sampled
population
spanned
ages
25-32
constant
k
estimates
0.09
Single
logistic
model
0.01
specialized
van
Bertalanffy
indicate
slow
growth.
combined
long
lifespan
stars
suggest
stocks
found
regions
may
take
substantial
time
period
establish
recover
potential
New Phytologist,
Journal Year:
2023,
Volume and Issue:
241(3), P. 1088 - 1099
Published: Nov. 22, 2023
Summary
Stoichiometric
rules
may
explain
the
allometric
scaling
among
biological
traits
and
body
size,
a
fundamental
law
of
nature.
However,
testing
elemental
stoichiometry
growth
to
size
over
course
plant
ontogeny
is
challenging.
Here,
we
used
fast‐growing
bamboo
species
examine
how
concentrations
contents
carbon
(C),
nitrogen
(N)
phosphorus
(P),
relative
rate
(
G
),
nutrient
productivity
scale
with
whole‐plant
mass
M
)
at
culm
elongation
maturation
stages.
The
C
content
vs
N
P
scaled
isometrically,
or
as
general
3/4
power
function
across
both
exponents
(and
P)
in
newly
grown
relationships
whole
stages
decreased
−1
function.
These
findings
reveal
previously
undocumented
generality
stoichiometric
allometries
provide
new
insights
for
understanding
origin
ubiquitous
quarter‐power
laws
biosphere.
Journal of Experimental Biology,
Journal Year:
2023,
Volume and Issue:
226(13)
Published: June 19, 2023
The
lifetime
growth
of
almost
all
fishes
follows
a
biphasic
relationship
-
juvenile
is
rapid
and
adult
subsequently
decelerates.
For
trend
that
so
ubiquitous,
there
no
general
agreement
as
to
the
underlying
mechanisms
causing
decelerate.
Ongoing
theories
argue
slows
because
either
gills
fail
supply
body
with
surplus
oxygen
needed
for
continued
somatic
gain
(i.e.
limited),
or
sexual
maturation
induces
switch
in
energy
allocation
towards
reproduction
away
from
limited).
Here,
we
empirically
tested
these
notions
by
tracking
individual
trajectories
∼100
female
Galaxias
maculatus,
ranging
size,
during
their
first
3
months
adulthood.
At
summer
temperature
20°C,
provided
subsets
fish
additional
(fed
once
versus
twice
day),
supplementary
(normoxia
hyperoxia),
combination
two,
assess
whether
could
change
trajectory
growth.
We
found
improved
marginally
energy,
yet
remained
unaffected
oxygen,
thereby
providing
evidence
role
reallocation
deceleration
Interestingly,
dietary
had
disproportionately
larger
effect
on
matured
at
greater
revealing
size-dependent
variance
acquisition
and/or
budgets
temperatures.
Overall,
findings
contribute
understanding
driving
widespread
declines
size
climate
warming.
Biology,
Journal Year:
2023,
Volume and Issue:
12(8), P. 1084 - 1084
Published: Aug. 3, 2023
Various
phenotypic
traits
relate
to
the
size
of
a
living
system
in
regular
but
often
disproportionate
(allometric)
ways.
These
“biological
scaling”
relationships
have
been
studied
by
biologists
for
over
century,
their
causes
remain
hotly
debated.
Here,
I
focus
on
patterns
and
possible
body-mass
scaling
rates/durations
various
biological
processes
life-history
events,
i.e.,
“pace
life”.
Many
regarded
rate
metabolism
or
energy
use
as
master
driver
life”
its
with
body
size.
Although
this
“energy
perspective”
has
provided
valuable
insight,
here
argue
that
“time
may
be
equally
even
more
important.
evaluate
major
ways
time
relevant
scaling,
including
(1)
an
independent
“fourth
dimension”
dimensional
analyses,
(2)
universal
clock”
synchronizes
rates/durations,
(3)
method
uses
periods
(allochrony)
metrics,
rather
than
measures
physical
(allometry),
traditionally
performed,
(4)
ultimate
body-size-related
constraint
rates/timing
processes/events
is
set
inevitability
death,
(5)
geological
“deep
time”
approach
viewing
evolution
patterns.
previously
proposed
four-dimensional
space-time
views
are
problematic,
novel
approaches
using
allochronic
analyses
perspectives
based
size-related
rates
individual
mortality
species
origination/extinction
provide
new
insights.
Evolutionary Applications,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
17(2)
Published: Feb. 1, 2024
Understanding
how
growth
and
reproduction
will
adapt
to
changing
environmental
conditions
is
a
fundamental
question
in
evolutionary
ecology,
but
predicting
the
responses
of
specific
taxa
challenging.
Analyses
physiological
effects
climate
change
upon
life
history
evolution
rarely
consider
alternative
hypothesized
mechanisms,
such
as
size-dependent
foraging
risk
predation,
simultaneously
shaping
optimal
patterns.
To
test
for
interactions
between
these
we
embedded
state-dependent
energetic
model
an
ecosystem
size-spectrum
ask
whether
prey
availability
(foraging)
predation
experienced
by
individual
fish
can
explain
observed
diversity
histories
fishes.
We
found
that
asymptotic
emerged
from
size-based
reproductive
mortality
patterns
context
food
web
interactions.
While
more
productive
ecosystems
led
larger
body
sizes,
temperature
on
metabolic
costs
had
only
small
size.
validate
our
model,
ran
it
abiotic
scenarios
corresponding
ecological
lifestyles
three
tuna
species,
considering
environments
included
seasonal
variation
temperature.
successfully
predicted
realistic
growth,
reproduction,
all
species.
individuals
grew
when
varied
seasonally,
spawning
was
restricted
part
year
(corresponding
their
migration
temperate
tropical
waters).
Growing
advantageous
because
opportunities
were
seasonally
constrained.
This
mechanism
could
gigantism
tunas.
Our
approach
addresses
well
processes
offers
promising
understand
life-history
ocean
conditions.
Molecular Ecology,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
33(23)
Published: Nov. 5, 2024
ABSTRACT
In
most
fishes,
the
number
of
offspring
increases
with
maternal
body
size.
Although
this
size‐fecundity
relationship
often
varies
among
species
as
a
result
coevolution
life‐history
traits,
genetic
basis
such
relationships
remains
unclear.
We
explored
underlying
in
two
small
medaka
species,
Oryzias
latipes
and
O.
sakaizumii
.
Our
findings
showed
that
has
higher
fecundity
than
,
quantitative
trait
locus
analysis
using
interspecific
F
2
hybrids
chromosome
23
is
linked
to
relationship.
particular,
genes
igf1
lep‐b
region
are
known
be
associated
including
somatic
growth,
gonad
maturation,
progeny
numbers
various
taxa.
Because
distributed
at
latitudes
shorter
spawning
season
wild,
we
propose
relatively
high
observed
an
adaptation
latitudes.
also
discuss
potential
ecological
ramifications
evolution
increased
species.
Academia Biology,
Journal Year:
2023,
Volume and Issue:
1(4)
Published: Nov. 23, 2023
Background:
Various
biological
properties
of
organisms
relate
to
body
size,
often
in
regular
quantifiable
ways.Traditionally,
these
scaling
relationships
have
been
explained
terms
internal
physical
constraints,
but
recently
external
ecological
factors
gained
increasing
attention.A
major
goal
my
review
is
expand
a
currently
developing
perspective
(allometry)
include
species
(biotic)
interactions,
with
emphasis
on
predation,
herbivory,
and
parasitism.Results:
I
evidence
for
two
kinds
interspecific
body-size
patterns:
(1)
negative
predator
richness
range
prey
size
(2)
positive
parasite/herbivore
host
size.I
argue
that
patterns
can
provide
new
insights
into
the
structure/function
communities
(including
latitudinal
trophic-level
gradients
biotic
interactions)
various
at
organism,
population,
community,
ecosystem
levels.I
further
exploration
other
interactions
(e.g.,
competition,
mutualism,
commensalism,
amensalism)
would
also
be
worthwhile.Conclusion:
The
findings
this
foundation
"mortality
theory
ecology"
comprehensive
allometry
embraces
both
factors,
under
development.Body-size
has
not
only
important
implications
development
synthetic
bridging
community
ecology
scaling,
practical
applications
understanding
effects
human
exploitation
climate
change
living
systems.