Literature DB >> 26655358

Constraint around Quarter-Power Allometric Scaling in Wild Tomatoes (Solanum sect. Lycopersicon; Solanaceae).

Christopher D Muir1, Meret Thomas-Huebner.   

Abstract

The West-Brown-Enquist (WBE) metabolic scaling theory posits that many organismal features scale predictably with body size because of selection to minimize transport costs in resource distribution networks. Many scaling exponents are quarter-powers, as predicted by WBE, but there are also biologically significant deviations that could reflect adaptation to different environments. A central but untested prediction of the WBE model is that wide deviation from optimal scaling is penalized, leading to a pattern of constraint on scaling exponents. Here, we demonstrate, using phylogenetic comparative methods, that variation in allometric scaling between mass and leaf area across 17 wild tomato taxa is constrained around a value indistinguishable from that predicted by WBE but significantly greater than 2/3 (geometric-similarity model). The allometric-scaling exponent was highly correlated with fecundity, water use, and drought response, suggesting that it is functionally significant and therefore could be under selective constraints. However, scaling was not strictly log-log linear but rather declined during ontogeny in all species, as has been observed in many plant species. We caution that although our results supported one prediction of the WBE model, it did not strongly test the model in other important respects. Nevertheless, phylogenetic comparative methods such as those used here are powerful but underutilized tools for metabolic ecology that complement existing methods to adjudicate between models.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26655358     DOI: 10.1086/682409

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am Nat        ISSN: 0003-0147            Impact factor:   3.926


  4 in total

1.  Making pore choices: repeated regime shifts in stomatal ratio.

Authors:  Christopher D Muir
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2015-08-22       Impact factor: 5.349

2.  Phylogenetic history of vascular plant metabolism revealed using a macroevolutionary common garden.

Authors:  Barbara M Neto-Bradley; Christopher D Muir; Jeannette Whitton; Matthew W Pennell
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2021-06-02       Impact factor: 5.530

3.  Nonlinear phenotypic variation uncovers the emergence of heterosis in Arabidopsis thaliana.

Authors:  François Vasseur; Louise Fouqueau; Dominique de Vienne; Thibault Nidelet; Cyrille Violle; Detlef Weigel
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2019-04-24       Impact factor: 8.029

4.  Solving the grand challenge of phenotypic integration: allometry across scales.

Authors:  François Vasseur; Adrianus Johannes Westgeest; Denis Vile; Cyrille Violle
Journal:  Genetica       Date:  2022-07-20       Impact factor: 1.633

  4 in total

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