

Author: Glazier Douglas S.
Publisher: MDPI
E-ISSN: 2079-8954|2|4|451-540
ISSN: 2079-8954
Source: Systems, Vol.2, Iss.4, 2014-10, pp. : 451-540
Disclaimer: Any content in publications that violate the sovereignty, the constitution or regulations of the PRC is not accepted or approved by CNPIEC.
Abstract
In this review I show that four major kinds of theoretical approaches have been used to explain the scaling of metabolic rate in cells, organisms and groups of organisms in relation to system size. They include models focusing on surface-area related fluxes of resources and wastes (including heat), internal resource transport, system composition, and various processes affecting resource demand, all of which have been discussed extensively for nearly a century or more. I argue that, although each of these theoretical approaches has been applied to multiple levels of biological organization, none of them alone can fully explain the rich diversity of metabolic scaling relationships, including scaling exponents (log-log slopes) that vary from ~0 to >1. Furthermore, I demonstrate how a synthetic theory of metabolic scaling can be constructed by including the context-dependent action of each of the above modal effects. This “contextual multimodal theory” (CMT) posits that various modulating factors (including metabolic level, surface permeability, body shape, modes of thermoregulation and resource-transport, and other internal and external influences) affect the mechanistic expression of each theoretical module. By involving the contingent operation of several mechanisms, the “meta-mechanistic” CMT differs from most metabolic scaling theories that are deterministically mechanistic. The CMT embraces a systems view of life, and as such recognizes the open, dynamic nature and complex hierarchical and interactive organization of biological systems, and the importance of multiple (upward, downward and reciprocal) causation, biological regulation of resource supply and demand and their interaction, and contingent internal (system) and external (environmental) influences on metabolic scaling, all of which are discussed. I hope that my heuristic attempt at building a unifying theory of metabolic scaling will not only stimulate further testing of all of the various subtheories composing it, but also foster an appreciation that many current models are, at least in part, complementary or even synergistic, rather than antagonistic. Further exploration about how the scaling of the rates of metabolism and other biological processes are interrelated should also provide the groundwork for formulating a general metabolic theory of biology.
Related content


Rediscovering and Reviving Old Observations and Explanations of Metabolic Scaling in Living Systems
Systems, Vol. 6, Iss. 1, 2018-01 ,pp. :


Scaling of Metabolic Scaling within Physical Limits
Systems, Vol. 2, Iss. 4, 2014-10 ,pp. :


Structure and Superstructures in Complex Social Systems
By Nescolarde-Selva Josué Antonio Usó-Doménech José Luis Gash Hugh
Systems, Vol. 5, Iss. 2, 2017-03 ,pp. :


Foreground and Background Components in Separable Complex Systems
By Sen Mihir Jáuregui-Correa Juan Carlos López-Cajún Carlos S.
Systems, Vol. 4, Iss. 3, 2016-07 ,pp. :


By Yoon Susan A. Anderson Emma Klopfer Eric Koehler-Yom Jessica Sheldon Josh Schoenfeld Ilana Wendel Daniel Scheintaub Hal Oztok Murat Evans Chad Goh Sao-Ee
Systems, Vol. 4, Iss. 4, 2016-12 ,pp. :