1 / 22

Dynamic Energy Budget Theory - I

Dynamic Energy Budget Theory - I. Tânia Sousa with contributions from : Bas Kooijman. A DEB organism : growth. Metabolism in a DEB individual. Rectangles are state variables

frye
Download Presentation

Dynamic Energy Budget Theory - I

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DynamicEnergy Budget Theory - I Tânia Sousa withcontributionsfrom : Bas Kooijman

  2. A DEB organism: growth • Metabolism in a DEB individual. • Rectangles are state variables • Arrows are flows of foodJXA, reserveJEA, JEC, JEM, JET, JEG, JER, JEJor structureJVG. • Circles are processes • The full square is a fixed allocation rule (the kappa rule) • The full circles are the priority maintenance rule. Feeding ME- Reserve Mobilisation Assimilation Offspring MER MaturityMaintenance Reproduction Growth SomaticMaintenance Maturation MV - Structure MH - Maturity

  3. Growth • Growthistheincreaseoftheamountofstructure (conversionof reserve intostructure) • Allocation to growth (supplydriven): • Stronghomeostasisimposes a fixedconversionefficiency • Stronghomeostasisimposes a constantdensity - numberof C-moles per unitofstructure body volume -yield of reserve onstructure

  4. Exercises • Obtainexpressionsthatdependonlyonstatevariablesandparametersfor • 1) growthand • 2) growthatconstantfood(weakhomeostasis) • Suggestion use the: • followingequations for 1) • Use thefollowingdefinition for 2) - reserve density

  5. Exercises • Theexpressionsthatdependonlyonstatevariablesandparametersfor • 1) growthis

  6. Exercises • Is thisVonBertallanffygrowth? • Yes, with - heatinglength

  7. Von Bertalanffy: growth at constant food • VonBertallanffygrowthin DEB theory • DEB theorypredicts: • decreaseswithspecificmaintenanceneedsandincreaseswiththe reserve density (foodlevel) • decreaseswith

  8. Von Bertalanffy: growth at constant food length, mm Von Bert growth rate -1, d time, d ultimate length, mm Alowerthefoodlevelimplies a smallerultimatesizeand a shorter time to reachit.

  9. Eggandfoetaldevelopment: differences • Growth in DEB: • Whathappens to the reserve density in anegg? • Itdecreases in time • Exercise: Whathappens to the reserve density in a foetus? • Ittends to infinity • Empiricalfact: Foetalweigthisproportional to cubed time

  10. Egg & Foetal development

  11. Competitionbetweengrowthandsomaticmaintenance • As theorganismgetsbiggeritgets more food (proportional to V2/3) butitgrowsslowerbecausesomaticmaintenance (proportional to V)iscompetingwithgrowth • Thehigherthespecificsomaticmaintenanceneedsthelowertheultimatesize

  12. Extremes in relative growth rate in insects Buprestis splendens (jewel beetle) Juveniles live in wood for 20-40 a Antheraea polyphemus (polyphemus moth) Juveniles increase weight 80000 × in 48 h

  13. Exercises • Obtain an expression for the dynamics of the reserve density mE • Suggestion use theequations for thedynamicsof MEand MVandfollowingequations: • Obtain na expression for themaximum reserve densitymEm • Set dmE/dt=0 (weakhomeostasis). • WhatisthevalueofmE? • WhatisthemaximumvalueofmE? • RewriteusingmEm. Whatisthemeaningof? - maximumlength -maximumreserve density

  14. A DEB organism: maturitymaintenance • Metabolism in a DEB individual. • Rectangles are state variables • Arrows are flows of foodJXA, reserveJEA, JEC, JEM, JET, JEG, JER, JEJor structureJVG. • Circles are processes • The full square is a fixed allocation rule (the kappa rule) • The full circles are the priority maintenance rule. Feeding ME- Reserve Mobilisation Assimilation Offspring MER MaturityMaintenance Reproduction Growth SomaticMaintenance Maturation MV - Structure MH - Maturity

  15. Maturity maintenance • Collection of processes that maintain the level of maturity • Defense and regulating systems • Maturity maintenance is paid from flux (1-)JE,C: •  maturity level • It does not increase after the onset of reproduction • Specificmaturitymaintenancecosts are constantbecauseofthestronghomeostasis • Thecomplexitywoulddecrease in theabsenceofenergyspent in itsmaintenance(2ndLawofthermodynamics) • Empiricalpattern: no reproductionoccursatverylowfooddensities - maturitymaintenance rate coefficient

  16. A DEB organism: maturation/reproduction • Metabolism in a DEB individual. • Rectangles are state variables • Arrows are flows of foodJXA, reserveJEA, JEC, JEM, JET, JEG, JER, JEJor structureJVG. • Circles are processes • The full square is a fixed allocation rule (the kappa rule) • The full circles are the priority maintenance rule. Feeding ME- Reserve Mobilisation Assimilation Offspring MER MaturityMaintenance Reproduction Growth SomaticMaintenance Maturation MV - Structure MH - Maturity

  17. Maturation/Reproduction • The use of reserve to increasethestateofmaturity (embryoandjuvenile) or to reproduce (adult) • Allocation to maturationin a juvenile (MH <MHp) or to reproduction in na adult (MH >=MHp) (supplydriven): • Empiricalpattern: organismskeptatlowfooddensityneverreachpubertyimplyingthattheywillnotreproduce • Stagetransitionsshouldnotbelinkedwithsize MHb- thresholdofmaturityatbirth MHp- thresholdofmaturityatpuberty

  18. Extremes in relative maturity at birth in mammals Didelphus marsupiales (Am opossum) ♂, ♀ 0.5 + 0.5 m, 6.5 kg At birth: <2 g; ab = 8-13 d 10-12 (upto 25) young/litter, 2 litters/a Ommatophoca rossii (Ross Seal) ♂ 1.7-2.1 m, 129-216 kg ♀ 1.3-2.2 m, 159-204 kg At birth: 1 m, 16.5 kg; ab = 270 d

  19. Extremes in relative maturity at birth in fish Mola mola (ocean sunfish) ♂,♀ 4 m, 1500 (till 2300) kg Egg: 3 1010 eggs in buffer At birth: 1.84 mm g; ab = ? d Feeds on jellyfish & combjellies Latimeriachalumnae (coelacanth) ♂, ♀ 1.9 m, 90 kg Egg: 325 g At birth: 30 cm; ab = 395 d Feeds on fish

  20. Reproduction • Theamountofenergycontinuouslyinvested in reproductionisaccumulated in a buffer andthenitisconvertedintoeggsprovidingtheinitialendowmentofthe reserve to theembryo • Initial amount of reserve follows from • Initial structural vol. and maturity are negligibly small and maturity at birth is given • Empirical fact: reserve density at birth equals that of mother at egg formation (egg size covaries with the nutritional state of the mother) - initial amountof reserve oftheegg - reproductionefficiency

  21. Reproduction: buffer handling rules • Rules for handling thereproduction buffer are species-specific (differentevolutionarystrategies) • Some speciesreproducewhenenoughenergy for a single egghasbeenaccumulated • Some speciesreproduce a largeclutch (some fisheshavethousandsofeggs) • Some species use environmentaltriggers for spawning (e.g., moluscs)

  22. Energyflows vs. Massflows =

More Related