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    Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2003 Apr 1;100(7):4046-9. Epub 2003 Mar 13.

    Mammalian basal metabolic rate is proportional to body mass2/3.

    White CR, Seymour RS.

    Department of Environmental Biology, University of Adelaide, Adelaide 5005, Australia. craig.white@adelaide.edu.au

    The relationship between mammalian basal metabolic rate (BMR, ml of O(2) per h) and body mass (M, g) has been the subject of regular investigation for over a century. Typically, the relationship is expressed as an allometric equation of the form BMR = aM(b). The scaling exponent (b) is a point of contention throughout this body of literature, within which arguments for and against geometric (b = 2/3) and quarter-power (b = 3/4) scaling are made and rebutted. Recently, interest in the topic has been revived by published explanations for quarter-power scaling based on fractal nutrient supply networks and four-dimensional biology. Here, a new analysis of the allometry of mammalian BMR that accounts for variation associated with body temperature, digestive state, and phylogeny finds no support for a metabolic scaling exponent of 3/4. Data encompassing five orders of magnitude variation in M and featuring 619 species from 19 mammalian orders show that BMR proportional, variant M(2/3).

    PMID: 12637681 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    PMCID: PMC153045

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