Cope's rule, the island rule and the scaling of mammalian population density
- 1 October 1993
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 365 (6448) , 748-750
- https://doi.org/10.1038/365748a0
Abstract
Cope's rule--the generalization that animal taxa tend to evolve toward larger body size--suggests that there are widespread net selective advantages to being large. Size-abundance relationships within bird and desert rodent guilds show that larger species usually do control more energy locally, and thus maintain larger populations than expected for their body size, implying that larger individuals are relatively better at obtaining and using local resources. But we report here results that show that this is not generally the case among mammal species. Within dietary groups containing only small species, larger species usually do better, but within those that contain the largest mammals, small species tend to control more energy. This suggests that in mammals there is an optimum body size for energy acquisition at about 1 kg. Thus, net adaptive advantages of large individuals for resource control cannot be used as a general explanation for evolutionary size increase in mammals, although other proposed explanations for Cope's rule are unaffected. Instead, these results suggest a partial explanation for another widespread ecotypic pattern, the 'island rule': that on islands, small mammal species evolve to larger size and large species to smaller size. If on an island a species' usual competitors and predators are absent, it should often tend to evolve toward the optimum body size, and the adaptive advantages of doing so would be greatest for populations starting at body-size extremes.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Relationships Between Body Size, Abundance and Phylogeny in Bird CommunitiesFunctional Ecology, 1992
- The relationship between abundance and body size in British birdsNature, 1991
- Trends as changes in variance: a new slant on progress and directionality in evolutionJournal of Paleontology, 1988
- Population Density and Body Size in BirdsThe American Naturalist, 1986
- Body size, ecological dominance and Cope's ruleNature, 1986
- GROUP SELECTION, SEX, AND FOSSILSEvolution, 1975
- AN EXPLANATION FOR COPE'S RULEEvolution, 1973
- ALLOMETRY AND SIZE IN ONTOGENY AND PHYLOGENYBiological Reviews, 1966
- Evolution of Mammals on IslandsNature, 1964
- PHYLETIC SIZE INCREASE, AN IMPORTANT TREND ILLUSTRATED BY FOSSIL INVERTEBRATESEvolution, 1949