Abstract
Both the power and level of the scaling function are sensitive to various factors that interact with body mass and rate of metabolism, including the precision of temperature regulation, food habits, and activity level. This sensitivity implies that the rate of metabolism is a highly plastic character in the course of evolution. Consequently, the singular effect of mass on the rate of metabolism is most effectively analyzed in ecologically and physiologically uniform sets of species, rather than in taxonomically defined groups, which often are ecologically and physiologically diverse. -from Author
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CITATION STYLE
McNab, B. K. (1988). Complications inherent in scaling the basal rate of metabolism in mammals. Quarterly Review of Biology, 63(1), 25–54. https://doi.org/10.1086/415715
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