Abstract Data from nearly 1000 species reveal the upper bound to rates of biomass production achievable by natural selection across the Tree of Life. For heterotrophs, maximum growth rates scale positively with organism size in bacteria but negatively in eukaryotes, whereas for phototrophs, the scaling is negligible for cyanobacteria and weakly negative for eukaryotes. These results have significant implications for understanding the bioenergetic consequences of the transition from prokaryotes to eukaryotes, and of the expansion of some groups of the latter into multicellularity. The magnitudes of the scaling coefficients for eukaryotes are significantly lower than expected under any proposed physical-constraint model. Supported by genomic,...
Size determines the rate at which organisms acquire and use resources but it is unclear what size sh...
We investigate the effects of trophic lifestyle and two types of major evolutionary transitions in i...
We investigate the effects of trophic lifestyle and two types of major evolutionary transitions in i...
Adaptation to local resource availability depends on responses in growth rate and nutrient acquisiti...
Adaptation to local resource availability depends on responses in growth rate and nutrient acquisiti...
Body size covaries with population dynamics across life's domains. Metabolism may impose fundamental...
Microbial minimal generation times range from a few minutes to several weeks. They are evolutionaril...
Microbial minimal generation times range from a few minutes to several weeks. They are evolutionaril...
The diversification of life involved enormous increases in size and complexity. The evolutionary tr...
International audienceMicrobial minimal generation times range from a few minutes to several weeks. ...
The solution space of genome-scale models of cellular metabolism provides a map between physically v...
Population growth rate is a fundamental ecological and evolutionary characteristic of living organis...
In prokaryotes, the number of genes in different functional classes shows apparent universal scaling...
Size determines the rate at which organisms acquire and use resources but it is unclear what size sh...
Size determines the rate at which organisms acquire and use resources but it is unclear what size sh...
Size determines the rate at which organisms acquire and use resources but it is unclear what size sh...
We investigate the effects of trophic lifestyle and two types of major evolutionary transitions in i...
We investigate the effects of trophic lifestyle and two types of major evolutionary transitions in i...
Adaptation to local resource availability depends on responses in growth rate and nutrient acquisiti...
Adaptation to local resource availability depends on responses in growth rate and nutrient acquisiti...
Body size covaries with population dynamics across life's domains. Metabolism may impose fundamental...
Microbial minimal generation times range from a few minutes to several weeks. They are evolutionaril...
Microbial minimal generation times range from a few minutes to several weeks. They are evolutionaril...
The diversification of life involved enormous increases in size and complexity. The evolutionary tr...
International audienceMicrobial minimal generation times range from a few minutes to several weeks. ...
The solution space of genome-scale models of cellular metabolism provides a map between physically v...
Population growth rate is a fundamental ecological and evolutionary characteristic of living organis...
In prokaryotes, the number of genes in different functional classes shows apparent universal scaling...
Size determines the rate at which organisms acquire and use resources but it is unclear what size sh...
Size determines the rate at which organisms acquire and use resources but it is unclear what size sh...
Size determines the rate at which organisms acquire and use resources but it is unclear what size sh...
We investigate the effects of trophic lifestyle and two types of major evolutionary transitions in i...
We investigate the effects of trophic lifestyle and two types of major evolutionary transitions in i...