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Dive into the research topics where James F. Gillooly is active.

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Featured researches published by James F. Gillooly.


Ecology | 2004

TOWARD A METABOLIC THEORY OF ECOLOGY

James H. Brown; James F. Gillooly; Andrew P. Allen; Van M. Savage; Geoffrey B. West

Metabolism provides a basis for using first principles of physics, chemistry, and biology to link the biology of individual organisms to the ecology of populations, communities, and ecosystems. Metabolic rate, the rate at which organisms take up, transform, and expend energy and materials, is the most fundamental biological rate. We have developed a quantitative theory for how metabolic rate varies with body size and temperature. Metabolic theory predicts how metabolic rate, by setting the rates of resource uptake from the environment and resource allocation to survival, growth, and reproduction, controls ecological processes at all levels of organization from individuals to the biosphere. Examples include: (1) life history attributes, including devel- opment rate, mortality rate, age at maturity, life span, and population growth rate; (2) population interactions, including carrying capacity, rates of competition and predation, and patterns of species diversity; and (3) ecosystem processes, including rates of biomass production and respiration and patterns of trophic dynamics. Data compiled from the ecological literature strongly support the theoretical predictions. Even- tually, metabolic theory may provide a conceptual foundation for much of ecology, just as genetic theory provides a foundation for much of evolutionary biology.


Nature | 2002

Effects of size and temperature on developmental time

James F. Gillooly; Eric L. Charnov; Geoffrey B. West; Van M. Savage; James H. Brown

Body size and temperature are the two most important variables affecting nearly all biological rates and times. The relationship of size and temperature to development is of particular interest, because during ontogeny size changes and temperature often varies. Here we derive a general model, based on first principles of allometry and biochemical kinetics, that predicts the time of ontogenetic development as a function of body mass and temperature. The model fits embryonic development times spanning a wide range of egg sizes and incubation temperatures for birds and aquatic ectotherms (fish, amphibians, aquatic insects and zooplankton). The model also describes nearly 75% of the variation in post-embryonic development among a diverse sample of zooplankton. The remaining variation is partially explained by stoichiometry, specifically the whole-body carbon to phosphorus ratio. Development in other animals at other life stages is also described by this model. These results suggest a general definition of biological time that is approximately invariant and common to all organisms.


The American Naturalist | 2004

Effects of Body Size and Temperature on Population Growth

Van M. Savage; James F. Gillooly; James H. Brown; Geoffrey B. West; Eric L. Charnov

For at least 200 years, since the time of Malthus, population growth has been recognized as providing a critical link between the performance of individual organisms and the ecology and evolution of species. We present a theory that shows how the intrinsic rate of exponential population growth, \documentclass{aastex} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{bm} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{pifont} \usepackage{stmaryrd} \usepackage{textcomp} \usepackage{portland,xspace} \usepackage{amsmath,amsxtra} \usepackage[OT2,OT1]{fontenc} \newcommand\cyr{ \renewcommand\rmdefault{wncyr} \renewcommand\sfdefault{wncyss} \renewcommand\encodingdefault{OT2} \normalfont \selectfont} \DeclareTextFontCommand{\textcyr}{\cyr} \pagestyle{empty} \DeclareMathSizes{10}{9}{7}{6} \begin{document} \landscape


Nature | 2003

Scaling metabolism from organisms to ecosystems

Brian J. Enquist; Evan P. Economo; Travis E. Huxman; Andrew P. Allen; Danielle D. Ignace; James F. Gillooly


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Ecological food webs: High-quality data facilitate theoretical unification

James H. Brown; James F. Gillooly

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Ecology Letters | 2009

Towards an integration of ecological stoichiometry and the metabolic theory of ecology to better understand nutrient cycling

Andrew P. Allen; James F. Gillooly


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Scaling of number, size, and metabolic rate of cells with body size in mammals.

Van M. Savage; Andrew P. Allen; James H. Brown; James F. Gillooly; Alexander B. Herman; William H. Woodruff; Geoffrey B. West

\end{document} , and the carrying capacity, K, depend on individual metabolic rate and resource supply rate. To do this, we construct equations for the metabolic rates of entire populations by summing over individuals, and then we combine these population‐level equations with Malthusian growth. Thus, the theory makes explicit the relationship between rates of resource supply in the environment and rates of production of new biomass and individuals. These individual‐level and population‐level processes are inextricably linked because metabolism sets both the demand for environmental resources and the resource allocation to survival, growth, and reproduction. We use the theory to make explicit how and why \documentclass{aastex} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{bm} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{pifont} \usepackage{stmaryrd} \usepackage{textcomp} \usepackage{portland,xspace} \usepackage{amsmath,amsxtra} \usepackage[OT2,OT1]{fontenc} \newcommand\cyr{ \renewcommand\rmdefault{wncyr} \renewcommand\sfdefault{wncyss} \renewcommand\encodingdefault{OT2} \normalfont \selectfont} \DeclareTextFontCommand{\textcyr}{\cyr} \pagestyle{empty} \DeclareMathSizes{10}{9}{7}{6} \begin{document} \landscape


PLOS ONE | 2011

The Cost of Sex: Quantifying Energetic Investment in Gamete Production by Males and Females

April Hayward; James F. Gillooly


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2010

The energetic basis of acoustic communication

James F. Gillooly; Alexander G. Ophir

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Nature | 2007

Biological scaling: Does the exception prove the rule?

Brian J. Enquist; Andrew P. Allen; James H. Brown; James F. Gillooly; Andrew J. Kerkhoff; Karl J. Niklas; Charles A. Price; Geoffrey B. West

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James H. Brown

University of New Mexico

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William H. Woodruff

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Chen Hou

Missouri University of Science and Technology

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