The negative scaling of plant and animal abundance with body mass is one of the most fundamental relationships in ecology. However, theoretical approaches to explain this phenomenon make the unrealistic assumption that species share a homogeneous resource. Here we present a simple model linking mass and metabolism with density that includes the effects of consumer size on resource characteristics (particle size, density, and distribution). We predict patterns consistent with the energy equivalence rule (EER) under some scenarios. However, deviations from EER occur as a result of variation in resource distribution and productivity (e.g., due to the clumping of prey or variation in food particle size selection). We also predict that abundance...
Individual resource ingestion rates depend on both individual body size and resource supply. A comp...
Energy equivalence, the notion that population energy flux is independent of body mass, has become a...
Hypotheses that relate body size to energy use are of particular interest in community ecology and m...
The relationship between body mass and abundance is a major focus for research in macroecology. The ...
1. Widely observed macro-ecological patterns in log abundance vs. log body mass of organisms can be ...
Abstract. Scaling relationships between mean body masses and abundances of species in multitrophic c...
The negative relationship between body size and population density in mammals is often interpreted a...
Differences in population density between species of varying size are frequently attributed to metab...
In communities sharing a common energy source, the energetic equivalence hypothesis predicts that nu...
1. Much of the debate surrounding the consequences of biodiversity loss centres around the issue of ...
1. Species' abundance scales approximately as an inverse power of body mass. This property has been ...
It has been suggested that differences in body size between consumer and resource species may have i...
It has been suggested that differences in body size between consumer and resource species may have i...
We address two fundamental ecological questions: what are the limits to animal population density an...
The proportion of time an animal spends actively foraging in a day determines its long-term fitness....
Individual resource ingestion rates depend on both individual body size and resource supply. A comp...
Energy equivalence, the notion that population energy flux is independent of body mass, has become a...
Hypotheses that relate body size to energy use are of particular interest in community ecology and m...
The relationship between body mass and abundance is a major focus for research in macroecology. The ...
1. Widely observed macro-ecological patterns in log abundance vs. log body mass of organisms can be ...
Abstract. Scaling relationships between mean body masses and abundances of species in multitrophic c...
The negative relationship between body size and population density in mammals is often interpreted a...
Differences in population density between species of varying size are frequently attributed to metab...
In communities sharing a common energy source, the energetic equivalence hypothesis predicts that nu...
1. Much of the debate surrounding the consequences of biodiversity loss centres around the issue of ...
1. Species' abundance scales approximately as an inverse power of body mass. This property has been ...
It has been suggested that differences in body size between consumer and resource species may have i...
It has been suggested that differences in body size between consumer and resource species may have i...
We address two fundamental ecological questions: what are the limits to animal population density an...
The proportion of time an animal spends actively foraging in a day determines its long-term fitness....
Individual resource ingestion rates depend on both individual body size and resource supply. A comp...
Energy equivalence, the notion that population energy flux is independent of body mass, has become a...
Hypotheses that relate body size to energy use are of particular interest in community ecology and m...