Temperature- and body mass-related variation in cyclic gas exchange characteristics and metabolic rate of seven species: Broader implications

The influence of temperature on metabolic rate and characteristics of the gas exchange patterns of flightless, sub-Antarctic Ectemnorhinus-group species from Heard and Marion islands was investigated. All of the species showed cyclic gas exchange with no Flutter period, indicating that these species...

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Main Authors: Klock, CJ, Chown, SL
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/119931
id ftunstellenbosch:oai:scholar.sun.ac.za:10019.1/119931
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunstellenbosch:oai:scholar.sun.ac.za:10019.1/119931 2023-05-15T14:05:07+02:00 Temperature- and body mass-related variation in cyclic gas exchange characteristics and metabolic rate of seven species: Broader implications Klock, CJ Chown, SL 2007-03-29T14:31:54Z 321192 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/119931 en eng PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD 0022-1910 http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/119931 Curculionidae Respirometry Scaling Sub-Antarctic Journal Articles 2007 ftunstellenbosch 2021-08-31T00:09:18Z The influence of temperature on metabolic rate and characteristics of the gas exchange patterns of flightless, sub-Antarctic Ectemnorhinus-group species from Heard and Marion islands was investigated. All of the species showed cyclic gas exchange with no Flutter period, indicating that these species are not characterized by discontinuous gas exchange cycles. Metabolic rate estimates were substantially lower in this study than in a previous one of a subset of the species, demonstrating that open-system respirometry methods provide more representative estimates of standard metabolic rate than do many closed-system methods. We recommend that the latter, and especially constant-pressure methods, either be abandoned for estimates of standard metabolic rate in insects, or have their outputs subject to careful scrutiny, given the wide availability of the former. V˙ CO2 increase with an increase in temperature (range: 0–15 1C) was modulated by an increase in cycle frequency, but typically not by an increase in burst volume. Previous investigations of temperature-related changes in cyclic gas exchange (both cyclic and discontinuous) in several other insect species were therefore substantiated. Interspecific mass-scaling of metabolic rate (ca. 0.466–0.573, excluding and including phylogenetic non-independence, respectively) produced an exponent lower than 0.75 (but not distinguishable from it or from 0.67). The increase of metabolic rate with mass was modulated by an increase in burst volume and not by a change in cycle frequency, in keeping with investigations of species showing discontinuous gas exchange. These findings are discussed in the context of the emerging macrophysiological metabolic theory of ecology. DST-NRF Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Stellenbosch University: SUNScholar Research Repository Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection Stellenbosch University: SUNScholar Research Repository
op_collection_id ftunstellenbosch
language English
topic Curculionidae
Respirometry
Scaling
Sub-Antarctic
spellingShingle Curculionidae
Respirometry
Scaling
Sub-Antarctic
Klock, CJ
Chown, SL
Temperature- and body mass-related variation in cyclic gas exchange characteristics and metabolic rate of seven species: Broader implications
topic_facet Curculionidae
Respirometry
Scaling
Sub-Antarctic
description The influence of temperature on metabolic rate and characteristics of the gas exchange patterns of flightless, sub-Antarctic Ectemnorhinus-group species from Heard and Marion islands was investigated. All of the species showed cyclic gas exchange with no Flutter period, indicating that these species are not characterized by discontinuous gas exchange cycles. Metabolic rate estimates were substantially lower in this study than in a previous one of a subset of the species, demonstrating that open-system respirometry methods provide more representative estimates of standard metabolic rate than do many closed-system methods. We recommend that the latter, and especially constant-pressure methods, either be abandoned for estimates of standard metabolic rate in insects, or have their outputs subject to careful scrutiny, given the wide availability of the former. V˙ CO2 increase with an increase in temperature (range: 0–15 1C) was modulated by an increase in cycle frequency, but typically not by an increase in burst volume. Previous investigations of temperature-related changes in cyclic gas exchange (both cyclic and discontinuous) in several other insect species were therefore substantiated. Interspecific mass-scaling of metabolic rate (ca. 0.466–0.573, excluding and including phylogenetic non-independence, respectively) produced an exponent lower than 0.75 (but not distinguishable from it or from 0.67). The increase of metabolic rate with mass was modulated by an increase in burst volume and not by a change in cycle frequency, in keeping with investigations of species showing discontinuous gas exchange. These findings are discussed in the context of the emerging macrophysiological metabolic theory of ecology. DST-NRF Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Klock, CJ
Chown, SL
author_facet Klock, CJ
Chown, SL
author_sort Klock, CJ
title Temperature- and body mass-related variation in cyclic gas exchange characteristics and metabolic rate of seven species: Broader implications
title_short Temperature- and body mass-related variation in cyclic gas exchange characteristics and metabolic rate of seven species: Broader implications
title_full Temperature- and body mass-related variation in cyclic gas exchange characteristics and metabolic rate of seven species: Broader implications
title_fullStr Temperature- and body mass-related variation in cyclic gas exchange characteristics and metabolic rate of seven species: Broader implications
title_full_unstemmed Temperature- and body mass-related variation in cyclic gas exchange characteristics and metabolic rate of seven species: Broader implications
title_sort temperature- and body mass-related variation in cyclic gas exchange characteristics and metabolic rate of seven species: broader implications
publisher PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/119931
geographic Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_relation 0022-1910
http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/119931
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