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Geometric Similarity in Allometric Growth: A Contribution to the Problem of Scaling in the Evolution of Size

Authors :
Stephen Jay Gould
Source :
The American Naturalist. 105:113-136
Publication Year :
1971
Publisher :
University of Chicago Press, 1971.

Abstract

The coefficient b of the power function y = bxa has long been misinterpreted as a measure of size-independent differences between regressions. Just the opposite is true; b is a scale factor that expresses differences in size between comparable animals of the same shape on two or more regressions of constant α. When α is invariant for two regressions, a similarity criterion s can be extracted from the two b-values (s = [b1/b2]1/(1-α)); s measures the relative difference in size at which animals on the two curves have the same shape. If this calculated difference equals the observed difference in size, then the transposition (shift of regression line without change of slope) occurred in order to maintain geometric similarity in a new size range. I present examples of geometric similarity via transposition for body shape in gulls, brain weight in felids and primates, tooth shape in canids, skull form in bovids, the evolution of Gryphaea, the growth of horses, and differences between local races of lobsters a...

Details

ISSN :
15375323 and 00030147
Volume :
105
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American Naturalist
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........71b24b33a7b9502e90a8368ff6d6a84e