Relations between Individual Size and Mammalian Population Density
- 1 October 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in The American Naturalist
- Vol. 124 (4) , 498-517
- https://doi.org/10.1086/284290
Abstract
Regression relations which describes the density of mammalian populations as functions of adult body mass were built using data for carnivores and herbivores from 4 continents. Global and temperate relations are similar to previous descriptions: herbivores are more abundant than carnivores and population density declines as body size increases. Regressions within biogeographic regions support this pattern but depart in detail. North American species are more abundant than tropical species and species from tropical America and central Africa are more abundant than mammals from East Africa and southern Asia. Within regions, herbivore density is less affected by size and presumably more affected by other factors than the global regressions suggest. Although the general regressions explain .apprx. 70% of the variance in animal density, more geographically restricted relations are less successful and none of the regressions are effective tools for the prediction of the abundance of individual populations. The mean tendency of population density described by these regressions can be of use in depicting the probable role of different-size mammals in community structure and dynamics.This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Physiology and Climate ChangeScience, 2008
- Food Habits, Energetics, and the Population Biology of MammalsThe American Naturalist, 1980
- Size, life history and ecology in mammalsAfrican Journal of Ecology, 1979
- Home Range and Body Weight‐‐A ReevaluationEcology, 1979
- On weight dependence of net growth efficiency and specific respiration rates among field populations of invertebratesOecologia, 1979
- Bioenergetics of Pelagic Fish: Theoretical Change in Swimming Speed and Ration with Body SizeJournal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 1978
- Relationships between body size and some life history parametersOecologia, 1978
- A Consideration of the Trophic Dynamics of a Late Cretaceous Large‐Dinosaur Community (Oldman Formation)Ecology, 1976
- Dimensional analysis and theory of biological similarityPhysiological Reviews, 1975
- Sizes of Feeding Territories among BirdsEcology, 1968