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Title

HOW DOES EVOLUTIONARY VARIATION IN BASAL METABOLIC RATES ARISE? A STATISTICAL ASSESSMENT AND A MECHANISTIC MODEL.

Authors

Naya, Daniel E.; Spangenberg, Lucía; Naya, Hugo; Bozinovic, Francisco

Abstract

Metabolic rates are related to the pace of life. Hence, research into their variability at global scales is of vital importance for several contemporary theories in physiology, ecology, and evolution. Here we evaluated the effect of latitude, climate, primary productivity, habitat aridity, and species trophic habits, on mass-independent basal metabolic rates (BMRs) for 195 rodent species. The aims of this article were twofold. First, we evaluated the predictive power of different statistical models (via a model selection approach), using a dimensional reduction technique on the exogenous factor matrix to achieve a clear interpretation of the selected models. Second, we evaluated three specific predictions derived from a recently proposed hypothesis, herein called the 'obligatory heat' model (OHM), for the evolution of BMR. Obtained results indicate that mean/minimum environmental temperature, rainfall/primary productivity and, finally, species trophic habits are, in this order, the major determinants of mass-independent BMR. Concerning the mechanistic causes behind this variation, obtained data agree with the predictions of the OHM: (1) mean annual environmental temperature was the best single predictor of residual variation in BMR, (2) herbivorous species have greater mass-independent metabolic rates, and tend to be present at high-latitude cold environments, than species in other trophic categories.

Subjects

BASAL metabolism; BIOLOGICAL evolution; PRIMARY productivity (Biology); RODENT physiology; WARM-blooded animals; HERBIVORES; EFFECT of temperature on animals

Publication

Evolution, 2013, Vol 67, Issue 5, p1463

ISSN

0014-3820

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1111/evo.12042

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