Abstract
The WBE theory proposed by West, Brown and Enquist predicts that larger plant respiration rate, R, scales to the three-quarters power of body size, M. However, studies on the R versus M relationship for larger plants (i.e. trees larger than saplings) have not been reported. Published respiration rates of field-grown trees (saplings and larger trees) were examined to test this relationship. Our results showed that for larger trees, aboveground respiration rates RA scaled as the 0.82-power of aboveground biomass M A,and that total respiration rates RT scaled as the 0.85-power of total biomass MT, both of which significantly deviated from the three-quarters scaling law predicted by the WBE theory, and which agreed with 0.81-0.84-power scaling of bio- mass to respiration across the full range of measured tree sizes for an independent dataset reported by Reich et al.(Reich et al.2006 Nature 439, 457-461). By contrast, R scaled nearly isometrically with M in saplings. We contend that the scaling exponent of plant metabolism is close to unity for saplings and decreases (but is significantly larger than three-quarters) as trees grow, implying that there is no universal metabolic scaling in plants. © 2010 The Royal Society.
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Cheng, D. L., Li, T., Zhong, Q. L., & Wang, G. X. (2010). Scaling relationship between tree respiration rates and biomass. Biology Letters, 6(5), 715–717. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2010.0070
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