- Fenchel's Law
Fenchel's Law is a regularity in
population ecology regarding how exponential population growth is related to the body size of the organism. It was first described by the Danish marine ecologistTom Fenchel . It contends that species with larger body sizes tend to have lower rates of population growth. More exactly, it states that the maximum rate of reproduction decreases with body size at a power of a quarter of the body mass [ [http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00384576 Fenchel, Tom (1974) Intrinsic rate of natural increase: the relationship with body size. Oecologia 14: 317-326.] ]Fenchel's law may be expressed as an allometric equation:
:,
where r is the intrinsic rate of natural population growth, a is a constant that has 3 different values (one for
unicellular organism s, one forpoikilotherm s and one forhomeotherm s), and W is the average body mass of the organism. This means that if a species "A" has a body mass 10 times that of species B, then the maximum population growth rate of "A" will be one-half that of species B [Ginzburg, L.R. & Colyvan, M. (2004) Ecological Orbits: how planets move and populations grow. Oxford University Press, New York ISBN 019516816X [http://books.google.se/books?id=9pZfyyRP0ccC&dq Google Books] ] .ources
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