Abstract Animal-mediated nutrient dynamics are critical processes in ecosystems. Previous research has found animal-mediated nutrient supply (excretion) to be highly predictable based on allometric scaling, but similar efforts to find universal predictive relationships for an organism’s body nutrient content have been inconclusive. We use a large dataset from a diverse tropical marine community to test three frameworks for predicting body nutrient content. We show that body nutrient content does not follow allometric scaling laws and that it is not well explained by trophic status. Instead, we find strong support for taxonomic identity (particularly at the family level) as a predictor of body nutrient content, indicating that evolutionary h...
Across resource quality gradients, primary consumers must regulate homeostasis and release of nutrie...
The Metabolic Theory of Ecology (MET) and the Ecological Stoichiometry Theory (EST) are central and ...
<div><p>In many contexts, nutrient excretion by consumers can impact ecosystems by altering the avai...
The importance of animals for mediating ecosystem processes has long been recognized by ecologists. ...
Animals can be important in modulating ecosystem-level nutrient cycling, although their importance v...
Models of biomass size spectra assume that organisms with higher body mass feed at higher trophic le...
International audienceAnimals can be important in modulating ecosystem-level nutrient cycling, altho...
Relationships between abundance ~ body size and trophic position ~ body size can reveal size structu...
The ecology of food security is not just about predicting yields, it is about understanding the ecol...
Do large organisms occupy higher trophic levels? Predators are often larger than their prey in food ...
Many physiological and ecological processes depend on body size and the supply of limiting nutrients...
1. Stoichiometric differences among organisms can affect trophic interactions and rates of nutrient ...
1. Stoichiometric differences among organisms can affect trophic interactions and rates of nutrient ...
Abundance-body size relationships are widely observed macroecological patterns in complete food webs...
International audience1.Stoichiometric differences among organisms can affect trophic interactions a...
Across resource quality gradients, primary consumers must regulate homeostasis and release of nutrie...
The Metabolic Theory of Ecology (MET) and the Ecological Stoichiometry Theory (EST) are central and ...
<div><p>In many contexts, nutrient excretion by consumers can impact ecosystems by altering the avai...
The importance of animals for mediating ecosystem processes has long been recognized by ecologists. ...
Animals can be important in modulating ecosystem-level nutrient cycling, although their importance v...
Models of biomass size spectra assume that organisms with higher body mass feed at higher trophic le...
International audienceAnimals can be important in modulating ecosystem-level nutrient cycling, altho...
Relationships between abundance ~ body size and trophic position ~ body size can reveal size structu...
The ecology of food security is not just about predicting yields, it is about understanding the ecol...
Do large organisms occupy higher trophic levels? Predators are often larger than their prey in food ...
Many physiological and ecological processes depend on body size and the supply of limiting nutrients...
1. Stoichiometric differences among organisms can affect trophic interactions and rates of nutrient ...
1. Stoichiometric differences among organisms can affect trophic interactions and rates of nutrient ...
Abundance-body size relationships are widely observed macroecological patterns in complete food webs...
International audience1.Stoichiometric differences among organisms can affect trophic interactions a...
Across resource quality gradients, primary consumers must regulate homeostasis and release of nutrie...
The Metabolic Theory of Ecology (MET) and the Ecological Stoichiometry Theory (EST) are central and ...
<div><p>In many contexts, nutrient excretion by consumers can impact ecosystems by altering the avai...