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The Importance of Size

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For example, a gorilla's femur is much thicker than a marmoset's femur simply ... Gorilla also has bigger muscles than a scaled up and proportional marmoset would ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Importance of Size


1
The Importance of Size
  • Body Size and its Relationship to Mammalian Life
    History

2
Geometric Scaling Rules
  • Scaling of Length, Area and Volume
  • Area is proportional to L2
  • Volume is proportional to L3
  • So, doubling the length increases the area by a
    factor of 4 (22)and the volume by a factor of 8
    (23)
  • Also, halving the length decreases the volume by
    a factor of 1/4 (1/2)2 and the volume by a
    factor of 1/8 (1/2)3

3
Scaling of Physiology
  • Muscle strength is determined by cross-sectional
    area of muscle (L2), but
  • Mass is determined by volume (L3)
  • So, increase in size often requires changes in
    shape to accommodate these scaling relationships.
  • For example, a gorillas femur is much thicker
    than a marmosets femur simply scaled up to
    gorilla size.
  • Gorilla also has bigger muscles than a scaled up
    and proportional marmoset would have

4
Size and Life History
  • Body size is strongly correlated with many life
    history traits of organisms
  • Longevity and age at first reproduction ()
  • Nutritional and energy requirements (-)
  • Brain size (), litter size (-), gestation ()
  • Home range size ()
  • Susceptibility to predation (-)

5
Size and Diet
  • Inverse relationship exists between body size and
    energy requirements, but larger primates eat more
    food daily
  • Small primates need high energy diet, typically
    insects (insectivores)
  • Large primates can make do with low energy diet,
    typically leaves, shoots and buds (folivorous)
  • Frugivorous primates add insects or leaves to
    their diet (for protein), based on their body
    size

6
Size, Diet, and Energy
  • Small primates must eat insects for their protein
    and energy (calories)
  • They have relatively very high energy
    requirements
  • Insects have much easily digested protein and are
    high in calories (per weight)
  • Foraging time for sufficient insects is not
    excessive

7
Size, Diet, and Energy
  • Large primates cannot eat insects for their
    protein and energy (calories)
  • They dont have special adaptations that allow
    collection of sufficient quantity
  • They have absolutely large daily food intake
    requirements
  • Foraging for insects would take a large primate
    all day, and they would still starve!

8
Size, Diet, and Energy
  • Small primates cant get their protein from
    leaves
  • Leaves are low quality source of protein
  • Difficult to digest cellulose without special
    enzymes or bacterial gut flora
  • Full of toxins to discourage mammals from eating
    them
  • Large primates have gut flora in separate
    chambers, long transit time due to long
    intestines, and lower relative energy
    requirements
  • Large primates often subsist on fruit and leaves
  • Some of the largest are obligate folivores

9
Size, Teeth, and Diet
  • Molar tooth morphology can be used to determine
    diet of primates
  • Eating fruit requires crushing while eating
    insects and leaves requires shearing
  • Crushing leads to low, blunt cusps and large
    basins
  • Shearing leads to sharp and long shearing crests
  • Kays threshold of 500g seems to form a natural
    break between insectivores and folivores
  • Kay measured shearing crests to distinguish
    between insectivorous, frugivorous, and
    folivorous primates

10
Size and Locomotion
  • Body size has a tremendous influence on locomotor
    patterns among primates
  • Constraints of body size involve mechanical
    forces involved in locomotion (i.e., gravity) and
    available platform sizes (i.e., arboreal vs.
    terrestrial)
  • Suspensory behaviors are always practiced by
    large primates
  • Leapers are always small
  • Terrestrial primates are bigger than arboreal
    ones
  • Quadrupeds can be any size

11
Regression Analysis
  • If we can empirically determine the relationship
    between some anatomical variable and body size,
    we can estimate body size from fragmentary fossil
    remains using linear regression

Y mX b
Formula for line, m is slope and b is Y-intercept
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