Allometric scaling of metabolic rate and cardiorespiratory variables in aquatic and terrestrial mammals

Author:

He Rebecca S.12,De Ruiter Stacy3,Westover Tristan12,Somarelli Jason A.4,Blawas Ashley M.14,Dayanidhi Divya L.4,Singh Ana3,Steves Benjamin3,Driesinga Samantha3,Halsey Lewis G.5,Fahlman Andreas678ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Duke University Marine Laboratory Nicholas School of the Environment Beaufort North Carolina USA

2. Department of Biology Duke University Durham North Carolina USA

3. Department of Mathematics and Statistics Calvin University Grand Rapids Michigan USA

4. Department of Medicine Duke University Medical Center Durham North Carolina USA

5. School of Life and Health Sciences University of Roehampton London UK

6. Fundación Oceanogràfic de la Comunitat Valenciana Valencia Spain

7. Kolmarden Wildlife Park Kolmarden Sweden

8. Linkoping University, IFM Linköping Sweden

Abstract

AbstractWhile basal metabolic rate (BMR) scales proportionally with body mass (Mb), it remains unclear whether the relationship differs between mammals from aquatic and terrestrial habitats. We hypothesized that differences in BMR allometry would be reflected in similar differences in scaling of O2 delivery pathways through the cardiorespiratory system. We performed a comparative analysis of BMR across 63 mammalian species (20 aquatic, 43 terrestrial) with a Mb range from 10 kg to 5318 kg. Our results revealed elevated BMRs in small (>10 kg and <100 kg) aquatic mammals compared to small terrestrial mammals. The results demonstrated that minute ventilation, that is, tidal volume (VT)·breathing frequency (fR), as well as cardiac output, that is, stroke volume·heart rate, do not differ between the two habitats. We found that the “aquatic breathing strategy”, characterized by higher VT and lower fR resulting in a more effective gas exchange, and by elevated blood hemoglobin concentrations resulting in a higher volume of O2 for the same volume of blood, supported elevated metabolic requirements in aquatic mammals. The results from this study provide a possible explanation of how differences in gas exchange may serve energy demands in aquatic versus terrestrial mammals.

Funder

Office of Naval Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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