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Jellyfish Body Plans Provide Allometric Advantages beyond Low Carbon Content

Jellyfish form spectacular blooms throughout the world’s oceans. Jellyfish body plans are characterised by high water and low carbon contents which enables them to grow much larger than non-gelatinous animals of equivalent carbon content and to deviate from non-gelatinous pelagic animals when incorp...

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Autores principales: Pitt, Kylie A., Duarte, Carlos M., Lucas, Cathy H., Sutherland, Kelly R., Condon, Robert H., Mianzan, Hermes, Purcell, Jennifer E., Robinson, Kelly L., Uye, Shin-Ichi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3742524/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23967331
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072683
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author Pitt, Kylie A.
Duarte, Carlos M.
Lucas, Cathy H.
Sutherland, Kelly R.
Condon, Robert H.
Mianzan, Hermes
Purcell, Jennifer E.
Robinson, Kelly L.
Uye, Shin-Ichi
author_facet Pitt, Kylie A.
Duarte, Carlos M.
Lucas, Cathy H.
Sutherland, Kelly R.
Condon, Robert H.
Mianzan, Hermes
Purcell, Jennifer E.
Robinson, Kelly L.
Uye, Shin-Ichi
author_sort Pitt, Kylie A.
collection PubMed
description Jellyfish form spectacular blooms throughout the world’s oceans. Jellyfish body plans are characterised by high water and low carbon contents which enables them to grow much larger than non-gelatinous animals of equivalent carbon content and to deviate from non-gelatinous pelagic animals when incorporated into allometric relationships. Jellyfish have, however, been argued to conform to allometric relationships when carbon content is used as the metric for comparison. Here we test the hypothesis that differences in allometric relationships for several key functional parameters remain for jellyfish even after their body sizes are scaled to their carbon content. Data on carbon and nitrogen contents, rates of respiration, excretion, growth, longevity and swimming velocity of jellyfish and other pelagic animals were assembled. Allometric relationships between each variable and the equivalent spherical diameters of jellyfish and other pelagic animals were compared before and after sizes of jellyfish were standardised for their carbon content. Before standardisation, the slopes of the allometric relationships for respiration, excretion and growth were the same for jellyfish and other pelagic taxa but the intercepts differed. After standardisation, slopes and intercepts for respiration were similar but excretion rates of jellyfish were 10× slower, and growth rates 2× faster than those of other pelagic animals. Longevity of jellyfish was independent of size. The slope of the allometric relationship of swimming velocity of jellyfish differed from that of other pelagic animals but because they are larger jellyfish operate at Reynolds numbers approximately 10× greater than those of other pelagic animals of comparable carbon content. We conclude that low carbon and high water contents alone do not explain the differences in the intercepts or slopes of the allometric relationships of jellyfish and other pelagic animals and that the evolutionary longevity of jellyfish and their propensity to form blooms is facilitated by their unique body plans.
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spelling pubmed-37425242013-08-21 Jellyfish Body Plans Provide Allometric Advantages beyond Low Carbon Content Pitt, Kylie A. Duarte, Carlos M. Lucas, Cathy H. Sutherland, Kelly R. Condon, Robert H. Mianzan, Hermes Purcell, Jennifer E. Robinson, Kelly L. Uye, Shin-Ichi PLoS One Research Article Jellyfish form spectacular blooms throughout the world’s oceans. Jellyfish body plans are characterised by high water and low carbon contents which enables them to grow much larger than non-gelatinous animals of equivalent carbon content and to deviate from non-gelatinous pelagic animals when incorporated into allometric relationships. Jellyfish have, however, been argued to conform to allometric relationships when carbon content is used as the metric for comparison. Here we test the hypothesis that differences in allometric relationships for several key functional parameters remain for jellyfish even after their body sizes are scaled to their carbon content. Data on carbon and nitrogen contents, rates of respiration, excretion, growth, longevity and swimming velocity of jellyfish and other pelagic animals were assembled. Allometric relationships between each variable and the equivalent spherical diameters of jellyfish and other pelagic animals were compared before and after sizes of jellyfish were standardised for their carbon content. Before standardisation, the slopes of the allometric relationships for respiration, excretion and growth were the same for jellyfish and other pelagic taxa but the intercepts differed. After standardisation, slopes and intercepts for respiration were similar but excretion rates of jellyfish were 10× slower, and growth rates 2× faster than those of other pelagic animals. Longevity of jellyfish was independent of size. The slope of the allometric relationship of swimming velocity of jellyfish differed from that of other pelagic animals but because they are larger jellyfish operate at Reynolds numbers approximately 10× greater than those of other pelagic animals of comparable carbon content. We conclude that low carbon and high water contents alone do not explain the differences in the intercepts or slopes of the allometric relationships of jellyfish and other pelagic animals and that the evolutionary longevity of jellyfish and their propensity to form blooms is facilitated by their unique body plans. Public Library of Science 2013-08-13 /pmc/articles/PMC3742524/ /pubmed/23967331 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072683 Text en © 2013 Pitt et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Pitt, Kylie A.
Duarte, Carlos M.
Lucas, Cathy H.
Sutherland, Kelly R.
Condon, Robert H.
Mianzan, Hermes
Purcell, Jennifer E.
Robinson, Kelly L.
Uye, Shin-Ichi
Jellyfish Body Plans Provide Allometric Advantages beyond Low Carbon Content
title Jellyfish Body Plans Provide Allometric Advantages beyond Low Carbon Content
title_full Jellyfish Body Plans Provide Allometric Advantages beyond Low Carbon Content
title_fullStr Jellyfish Body Plans Provide Allometric Advantages beyond Low Carbon Content
title_full_unstemmed Jellyfish Body Plans Provide Allometric Advantages beyond Low Carbon Content
title_short Jellyfish Body Plans Provide Allometric Advantages beyond Low Carbon Content
title_sort jellyfish body plans provide allometric advantages beyond low carbon content
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3742524/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23967331
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072683
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