Title of article :
Plant Allometry, Leaf Nitrogen and Phosphorus Stoichiometry, and Interspecific Trends in Annual Growth Rates
Author/Authors :
J.، NIKLAS, KARL نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages :
-154
From page :
155
To page :
0
Abstract :
Background Life forms as diverse as unicellular algae, zooplankton, vascular plants, and mammals appear to obey quarter-power scaling rules. Among the most famous of these rules is Kleiberʹs (i.e. basal metabolic rates scale as the three-quarters power of body mass), which has a botanical analogue (i.e. annual plant growth rates scale as the three-quarters power of total body mass). Numerous theories have tried to explain why these rules exist, but each has been heavily criticized either on conceptual or empirical grounds.N,PStoichiometry Recent models predicting growth rates on the basis of how total cell, tissue, or organism nitrogen and phosphorus are allocated, respectively, to protein and rRNA contents may provide the answer, particularly in light of the observation that annual plant growth rates scale linearly with respect to standing leaf mass and that total leaf mass scales isometrically with respect to nitrogen but as the three-quarters power of leaf phosphorus. For example, when these relationships are juxtaposed with other allometric trends, a simple N,P-stoichiometric model successfully predicts the relative growth rates of 131 diverse C3 and C4 species.Conclusions The melding of allometric and N,P-stoichiometric theoretical insights provides a robust modelling approach that conceptually links the subcellular `machineryʹ of protein/ribosomal metabolism to observed growth rates of uni- and multicellular organisms. Because the operation of this `machineryʹ is basic to the biology of all life forms, its allometry may provide a mechanistic explanation for the apparent ubiquity of quarter-power scaling rules.
Keywords :
public health
Journal title :
Annals of Botany
Serial Year :
2006
Journal title :
Annals of Botany
Record number :
118463
Link To Document :
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