savage | R Documentation |
Compilation of mammalian BMR and biomass data from the large data sets used in the studies of Hart (1971), Heusner (1991), Lovegrove (2000, 2003) and White & Seymour (2003). Data compiled by Savage (2004).
data("savage")
A data frame with 1006 observations on the following 9 variables.
Order
Mammal order.
Family
Mammal family.
Species
Mammal genus and species.
Mass
Biomass in grams.
BMR
Basal metabolic rate in watts
AvgMass
Average mass, given multiple reports for a particular species.
AvgBMR
Average BMR, given multiple reports for a particular species.
References
Authorities from whom data were obtained.
Notes
Note concerning a repeated species name.
Savage, 548 V.M., Gillooly, J.F., Woodruff, W.H., West, G.B., Allen, A.P., Enquist, B.J., Brown, J.H. (2004) The predominance of quarter-power scaling in biology. Functional Ecology, 18, 257-282.
Hart, J.S. (1971) Rodents in Comparative Physiology of Thermoregulation, Vol. II Mammals (ed. G.C. Whittow), pp. 2-149. Academic Press, New York.
Heusner, A.A. (1991) Size and power in mammals. Journal of Experimental Biology 160, 25-54.
Lovegrove, B.G. (2000) The zoogeography of mammalian basal metabolic rate. American Naturalist 156, 201-219.
Lovegrove, B.G. (2003) The influence of climate on the metabolic rate of small mammals: a slow-fast metabolic continuum. Journal of Comparative Physiology B 173, 87-112.
White, C.R. and Seymour, R.S. (2003) Mammalian basal metabolic rate is proportional to 584 body mass 2/3. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 100, 4046-4049.
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