Testing metabolic scaling theory using intraspecific allometries in Antarctic microarthropods
Tancredi Caruso, Diego Garlaschelli, Roberto Bargagli, Peter Convey

TL;DR
This study investigates how metabolic rate scales with body mass and temperature in Antarctic microarthropods, revealing significant intraspecific variability and potential biases in traditional analysis methods.
Contribution
It introduces a non-linear modeling approach to better understand intraspecific metabolic scaling, challenging previous logarithmic transformation-based analyses.
Findings
Intraspecific scaling exponents vary significantly across taxa.
Non-linear models suggest traditional logarithmic methods may bias results.
Metabolic scaling exponents range from 0.6 to 0.8 within taxa.
Abstract
Quantitative scaling relationships among body mass, temperature and metabolic rate of organisms are still controversial, while resolution may be further complicated through the use of different and possibly inappropriate approaches to statistical analysis. We propose the application of a modelling strategy based on Akaike's information criteria and non-linear model fitting (nlm). Accordingly, we collated and modelled available data at intraspecific level on the individual standard metabolic rate of Antarctic microarthropods as a function of body mass (M), temperature (T), species identity (S) and high rank taxa to which species belong (G) and tested predictions from Metabolic Scaling Theory. We also performed allometric analysis based on logarithmic transformations (lm). Conclusions from lm and nlm approaches were different. Best-supported models from lm incorporated T, M and S. The…
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