reviewJournal of Experimental BiologyApr 26, 2005BRONZE OA

Body size, energy metabolism and lifespan

University of Aberdeen

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Bigger animals live longer. The scaling exponent for the relationship between lifespan and body mass is between 0.15 and 0.3. Bigger animals also expend more energy, and the scaling exponent for the relationship of resting metabolic rate (RMR) to body mass lies somewhere between 0.66 and 0.8. Mass-specific RMR therefore scales with a corresponding exponent between -0.2 and -0.33. Because the exponents for mass-specific RMR are close to the exponents for lifespan, but have opposite signs, their product (the mass-specific expenditure of energy per lifespan) is independent of body mass (exponent between -0.08 and 0.08). This means that across species a gram of tissue on average expends about the same amount of…

Citation impact

906
total citations
FWCI
30.90
Percentile
100%
References
144
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Basal metabolic rate
  • Exponent
  • Ageing
  • Energy metabolism
  • Metabolic rate
  • Scaling
  • Biology
  • Energetics
No related works found for this paper.