Glazier Douglas S
Department of Biology, Juniata College, Huntingdon, Pennsylvania, 16652, USA.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2025 Apr;100(2):586-619. doi: 10.1111/brv.13153. Epub 2024 Nov 29.
The magnitude of many kinds of biological structures and processes scale with organismal size, often in regular ways that can be described by power functions. Traditionally, many of these "biological scaling" relationships have been explained based on internal geometric, physical, and energetic constraints according to universal natural laws, such as the "surface law" and "3/4-power law". However, during the last three decades it has become increasingly apparent that biological scaling relationships vary greatly in response to various external (environmental) factors. In this review, I propose and provide several lines of evidence supporting a new ecological perspective that I call the "mortality theory of ecology" (MorTE). According to this viewpoint, mortality imposes time limits on the growth, development, and reproduction of organisms. Accordingly, small, vulnerable organisms subject to high mortality due to predation and other environmental hazards have evolved faster, shorter lives than larger, more protected organisms. A MorTE also includes various corollary, size-related internal and external causative factors (e.g. intraspecific resource competition, geometric surface area to volume effects on resource supply/transport and the protection of internal tissues from environmental hazards, internal homeostatic regulatory systems, incidence of pathogens and parasites, etc.) that impact the scaling of life. A mortality-centred approach successfully predicts the ranges of body-mass scaling slopes observed for many kinds of biological and ecological traits. Furthermore, I argue that mortality rate should be considered the ultimate (evolutionary) driver of the scaling of life, that is expressed in the context of other proximate (functional) drivers such as information-based biological regulation and spatial (geometric) and energetic (metabolic) constraints.
许多生物结构和过程的规模与生物体大小相关,通常以幂函数描述的规则方式呈现。传统上,许多这类“生物尺度”关系是根据普遍自然法则,如“表面定律”和“3/4幂定律”,基于内部几何、物理和能量限制来解释的。然而,在过去三十年中,越来越明显的是,生物尺度关系会因各种外部(环境)因素而有很大差异。在这篇综述中,我提出并提供了几条证据来支持一种新的生态观点,我称之为“生态学死亡率理论”(MorTE)。根据这一观点,死亡率对生物体的生长、发育和繁殖施加了时间限制。因此,由于捕食和其他环境危害而面临高死亡率的小型脆弱生物体,其进化出的生命比体型较大、受保护更多的生物体更快、更短。生态学死亡率理论还包括各种与大小相关的推论性内部和外部因果因素(例如种内资源竞争、几何表面积与体积对资源供应/运输的影响以及内部组织免受环境危害的保护、内部稳态调节系统、病原体和寄生虫的发生率等),这些因素会影响生命的尺度。以死亡率为中心的方法成功预测了多种生物和生态特征所观察到的体重尺度斜率范围。此外,我认为死亡率应被视为生命尺度的最终(进化)驱动因素,它在其他近因(功能)驱动因素的背景下表现出来,如基于信息的生物调节以及空间(几何)和能量(代谢)限制。