The rates of metabolism in animals vary tremendously throughout the biosphere. The origins of this variation are a matter of active debate with some scientists highlighting the importance of anatomical or environmental constraints, while others emphasize the diversity of ecological roles that organisms play and the associated energy demands. Here, we analyse metabolic rates in diverse marine taxa, with special emphasis on patterns of metabolic rate across a depth gradient, in an effort to understand the extent and underlying causes of variation. The conclusion from this analysis is that low rates of metabolism, in the deep sea and elsewhere, do not result from resource (e.g. food or oxygen) limitation or from temperature or pressure constra...
Temperature imposes a constraint on the rates and outcomes of ecological processes that determine co...
Physiological responses will determine many aspects of species' ecology in a changed environment. A ...
With frigid temperatures and virtually no in situ productivity, the deep oceans, Earth's largest eco...
The rates of metabolism in animals vary tremendously throughout the biosphere. The origins of this v...
Metabolic energy demand is both a cause and consequence of how animals interact with their environme...
Climate and physiology shape biogeography, yet the range limits of species can rarely be ascribed to...
Recent analyses of metabolic rates in fishes, echinoderms, crustaceans and cephalopods have conclude...
Recent ecological theory depends, for predictive power, on the apparent similarity of metabolic rate...
The great anthropogenic alterations occurring to carbon availability in the oceans necessitate an un...
Recent ecological theory depends, for predictive power, on the apparent similarity of metabolic rate...
Metabolic rates are fundamental to many biological processes, and commonly scale with body size with...
The metabolism of several animal groups declines with depth even after adjustments for size and temp...
Rates of aerobic metabolism vary considerably across evolutionary lineages, but little is known abou...
Metabolic rate is a key component of energy budgets that scales with body size and varies with large...
Metabolic rate - the energy expenditure of an organism over time - is considered by some ecologists ...
Temperature imposes a constraint on the rates and outcomes of ecological processes that determine co...
Physiological responses will determine many aspects of species' ecology in a changed environment. A ...
With frigid temperatures and virtually no in situ productivity, the deep oceans, Earth's largest eco...
The rates of metabolism in animals vary tremendously throughout the biosphere. The origins of this v...
Metabolic energy demand is both a cause and consequence of how animals interact with their environme...
Climate and physiology shape biogeography, yet the range limits of species can rarely be ascribed to...
Recent analyses of metabolic rates in fishes, echinoderms, crustaceans and cephalopods have conclude...
Recent ecological theory depends, for predictive power, on the apparent similarity of metabolic rate...
The great anthropogenic alterations occurring to carbon availability in the oceans necessitate an un...
Recent ecological theory depends, for predictive power, on the apparent similarity of metabolic rate...
Metabolic rates are fundamental to many biological processes, and commonly scale with body size with...
The metabolism of several animal groups declines with depth even after adjustments for size and temp...
Rates of aerobic metabolism vary considerably across evolutionary lineages, but little is known abou...
Metabolic rate is a key component of energy budgets that scales with body size and varies with large...
Metabolic rate - the energy expenditure of an organism over time - is considered by some ecologists ...
Temperature imposes a constraint on the rates and outcomes of ecological processes that determine co...
Physiological responses will determine many aspects of species' ecology in a changed environment. A ...
With frigid temperatures and virtually no in situ productivity, the deep oceans, Earth's largest eco...