ICES Journal of Marine Science: Journal du Conseil Advance Access originally published online on February 13, 2008
ICES Journal of Marine Science: Journal du Conseil 2008 65(3):371-378; doi:10.1093/icesjms/fsn003
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Exploring a first-principles-based model for zooplankton respiration
1 Institut Ciències del Mar (CSIC), Passeig Marítim de la Barceloneta 37-49, 08003 Barcelona, Spain, and Bigelow Laboratory, West Boothbay Harbor, ME 04575, USA
2 Biological Oceanography Group, Marine Science Faculty, Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Campus Universitario de Tafira, 35017 Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain
Correspondence to T. T. Packard: Institut Ciències del Mar (CSIC), Passeig Marítim de la Barceloneta 37-49, 08003 Barcelona, Spain. tel: +34 928 452905; fax: +34 928 452922; e-mail: ted{at}icm.csic.es
Packard, T. T., and Gómez, M. 2008. Exploring a first-principles-based model for zooplankton respiration. – ICES Journal of Marine Science, 65: 371–378.Oxygen consumption (R) is caused by the respiratory electron transfer system (ETS), not biomass. ETS is ubiquitous in zooplankton, determines the level of potential respiration (
), and is the enzyme system that ultimately oxidizes the products of food digestion, makes ATP, and consumes O2. Current respiration hypotheses are based on allometric relationships between R and biomass. The most accepted version at constant temperature (T) is R = i0M0.75, where i0 is a constant. We argue that, for zooplankton, a
-based, O2-consuming algorithm is more consistent with the cause of respiration. Our point: although biomass is related to respiration, the first-principles cause of respiration is ETS, because it controls O2 consumption. Biomass itself is indirectly related to respiration, because it packages the ETS. Consequently, we propose bypassing the packaging and modelling respiration from ETS and hence
. This
is regulated by T, according to Arrhenius theory, and by specific reactants (S) that sustain the redox reactions of O2 consumption, according to Michaelis–Menten kinetics. Our model not only describes respiration over a large range of body sizes but also explains and accurately predicts respiration on short time-scales. At constant temperature, our model takes the form:
Keywords: biomass, electron transfer system, Kleiber's law, metabolic theory of ecology, metabolism, respiration
Received 29 June 2007; accepted 6 December 2007; advance access publication 13 February 2008.