Allometric scaling of population variance with mean body size is predicted from Taylor's law and density-mass allometry

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Abstract

Two widely tested empirical patterns in ecology are combined here to predict how the variation of population density relates to the average body size of organisms. Taylor's law (TL) asserts that the variance of the population density of a set of populations is a power-law function of the mean population density. Density-mass allometry (DMA) asserts that the mean population density of a set of populations is a power-law function of the mean individual body mass. Combined, DMA and TL predict that the variance of the population density is a power-law function of mean individual body mass. We call this relationship "variance-mass allometry"(VMA). We confirmed the theoretically predicted power-law form and the theoretically predicted parameters of VMA, using detailed data on individual oak trees (Quercus spp.) of Black Rock Forest, Cornwall, New York. These results connect the variability of population density to the mean body mass of individuals.

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Cohen, J. E., Xu, M., & Schuster, W. S. F. (2012). Allometric scaling of population variance with mean body size is predicted from Taylor’s law and density-mass allometry. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 109(39), 15829–15834. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1212883109

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