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Form, function, and evolution of living organisms.

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Summary
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This study derives Kleiber's law, the scaling of metabolic rate with organism mass, independent of species. It explains variations in scaling across diverse life forms, including plants and animals.

Keywords:
allometric scalingbiological scalingfractaltree geometry

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Area of Science:

  • Metabolic scaling laws
  • Theoretical biology
  • Comparative physiology

Background:

  • Organismal size and shape vary greatly, yet metabolic rates often follow predictable patterns.
  • Kleiber's law describes a universal power-law relationship between metabolic rate and body mass.
  • Existing models often oversimplify organismal geometry and physiology.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To derive Kleiber's law from fundamental principles, independent of specific species.
  • To explain deviations from the strict power law and account for diverse organismal geometries.
  • To predict the existence of life forms with intermediate geometries.

Main Methods:

  • Developing a physics-based model for metabolic scaling.
  • Incorporating distinct geometric factors of different organism types (e.g., trees, mammals).
  • Analyzing deviations from pure power-law scaling.

Main Results:

  • A generalized derivation of Kleiber's law applicable across diverse life forms.
  • Explanation for variations in scaling exponents based on organismal form.
  • Predictions aligning with empirical data on metabolic scaling.

Conclusions:

  • Fundamental physics principles underlie metabolic scaling across life.
  • Organismal geometry and evolutionary history shape metabolic scaling laws.
  • The model provides a unified framework for understanding plant and animal metabolic scaling.