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DEB theory, an introduction Bas Kooijman Dept theoretical biology Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

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1 DEB theory, an introduction Bas Kooijman Dept theoretical biology Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Bas@bio.vu.nl http://www.bio.vu.nl/thbhttp://www.bio.vu.nl/thb/ Groningen, 2011/09/29

2 Criteria for general energy models Quantitative Based on explicit assumptions that together specify all quantitative aspects to allow for mass and energy balancing Consistency Assumptions should be consistent in terms of internal logic, with physics and chemistry, as well as with empirical patterns Simplicity Implied model(s) should be simple (numbers of variables and parameters) enough to allow testing against data Generality The conditions species should fulfill to be captured by the model(s) must be explicit and make evolutionary sense Explanatory The more empirical patterns are explained, the better the model From Sousa et al 2010 Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. B 365: 3413-3428

3 Empirical patterns Feeding During starvation, organisms are able to reproduce, grow and survive for some time At abundant food, the feeding rate is at some maximum, independent of food density Growth Many species continue to grow after reproduction has started Growth of isomorphic organisms at abundant food is well described by the von Bertalanffy For different constant food levels the inverse von Bertalanffy growth rate increases linearly with ultimate length The von Bertalanffy growth rate of different species decreases almost linearly with the maximum body length Fetuses increase in weight approximately proportional to cubed time Reproduction Reproduction increases with size intra-specically, but decreases with size inter-specifically Respiration Animal eggs and plant seeds initially hardly use dioxygen The use of dioxygen increases with decreasing mass in embryos and increases with mass in juveniles and adults The use of dioxygen scales approximately with body weight raised to a power close to 0.75 Animals show a transient increase in metabolic rate after ingesting food (heat increment of feeding) Stoichiometry The chemical composition of organisms depends on the nutritional status (starved vs well-fed) The chemical composition of organisms growing at constant food density becomes constant Energy Dissipating heat is a weighted sum of 3 mass flows: carbon dioxide, dioxygen and nitrogenous waste From Sousa et al 2008 Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. B 363: 2453-2463

4 Empirical special cases of DEB 11.1 yearauthormodelyearauthormodel 1780Lavoisier multiple regression of heat against mineral fluxes 1950Emerson cube root growth of bacterial colonies 1825Gompertz Survival probability for aging 1951Huggett & Widdas foetal growth 1889Arrhenius temperature dependence of physiological rates 1951Weibull survival probability for aging 1891Huxley allometric growth of body parts 1955Best diffusion limitation of uptake 1902Henri Michaelis--Menten kinetics 1957Smith embryonic respiration 1905Blackman bilinear functional response 1959Leudeking & Piret microbial product formation 1910Hill Cooperative binding 1959Holling hyperbolic functional response 1920Pütter von Bertalanffy growth of individuals 1962Marr & Pirt maintenance in yields of biomass 1927Pearl logistic population growth 1973Droop reserve (cell quota) dynamics 1928Fisher & Tippitt Weibull aging 1974Rahn & Ar water loss in bird eggs 1932Kleiber respiration scales with body weight 3/ 4 1975Hungate digestion 1932Mayneord cube root growth of tumours 1977Beer & Anderson development of salmonid embryos DEB theory is axiomatic, based on mechanisms not meant to glue empirical models Since many empirical models turn out to be special cases of DEB theory the data behind these models support DEB theory This makes DEB theory very well tested against data

5 DEB papers prediction for 2012: 1 paper per week http://www.bio.vu.nl/thb/deb/

6 Homeostasis 1.2 strong homeostasis constant composition of pools (reserves/structures) generalized compounds, stoichiometric contraints on synthesis weak homeostasis constant composition of biomass during growth in constant environments determines reserve dynamics (in combination with strong homeostasis) structural homeostasis constant relative proportions during growth in constant environments isomorphy.work load allocation thermal homeostasis ectothermy  homeothermy  endothermy acquisition homeostasis supply  demand systems development of sensors, behavioural adaptations

7 Isomorph with 1 reserve & 1 structure feeds on 1 type of food has 3 life stages (embryo, juvenile, adult) Processes: Balances: mass, energy, entropy, time Standard DEB model 2a Extensions: more types of food and food qualities more types of reserve (autotrophs) more types of structure (organs, plants) changes in morphology different number of life stages feeding digestion maintenance storage product formation maturation growth reproduction aging

8 1-  maturity maintenance maturity offspring maturation reproduction Standard DEB scheme 2b foodfaeces assimilation reserve feeding defecation structure somatic maintenance growth  time: searching & handling feeding  surface area weak & strong homeostasis κ-rule for allocation to soma maintenance has priority somatic maint  structure maturity maint  maturity stage transition: maturation embryo: no feeding, reprod juvenile: no reproduction adult: no maturation maternal effect: reserve density at birth equals that of mother initially: zero structure, maturity 1 food type, 1 reserve, 1 structure, isomorph

9 Topological alternatives 11.1c From Lika & Kooijman 2011 J. Sea Res, to appear

10 Growth at constant food 2.6.1 time, d ultimate length, mm length, mm Von Bert growth rate -1, d Von Bertalanffy growth curve:

11 Faculative phototrophy 10.2.3x Many phototrophs can be green or coulorless. Facus still has chloroplasts, but sometimes no chlorophyll. Facus alatus, two individuals from the same small pool in Speudersbos Euplotes muscicola EuglenophytaCiliophora 2 individuals that follow the standard DEB model can merge such that the merged individual again follows the standard DEB model photo- & heterotrophs only differ in their assimilation module

12 Reserve residence time 2.3.1b

13 Embryonic development 2.6.2d time, d weight, g O 2 consumption, ml/h Crocodylus johnstoni, Data from Whitehead 1987 yolk embryo

14 Stage transitions at maturity thresholds Danio rerio 28.5°C Augustine et al 2011 Comp. Biochem. Physiol. A 159 :275–283

15 Stage transitions at maturity thresholds Augustine et al 2011 Comp. Biochem. Physiol. A 159 :275–283 Danio rerio 28.5°C Data: Lauwrence et al 2008 caloric restiction Data: Augustine < birth : isomorph birth-metamorphosis: V1-morph > metamorphosis : isomorph

16 Acceleration of development indirect direct acceleration development no yes Pseudophryne bibronii Geocrinia vitellina Crinia georgiana Crinia nimbus

17 Acceleration of development O 2 nmol/h Dry mass, mg Crinia georgiana Pseudophryne bibronii age, d hatch birth Mueller et al 2011, subm max dry weight 500 mg max dry weight 200 mg 12 °C 1 0 ½ ¾ ¼  1 0 ½ ¾ ¼ metam

18 Scaling of respiration 8.2.2d Respiration: contributions from growth and maintenance Weight: contributions from structure and reserve Kooijman 1986 J Theor Biol 121: 269-282

19 Metabolic rate 8.2.2e Log weight, g Log metabolic rate, w endotherms ectotherms unicellulars slope = 1 slope = 2/3 Length, cm O 2 consumption,  l/h Inter-species Intra-species 0.0226 L 2 + 0.0185 L 3 0.0516 L 2.44 2 curves fitted: (Daphnia pulex) Data: Hemmingson 1969; curve fitted from DEB theoryData: Richman 1958; curve fitted from DEB theory

20 Change in body shape 4.2.2 Isomorph: surface area  volume 2/3 volumetric length = volume 1/3 V0-morph: surface area  volume 0 V1-morph: surface area  volume 1 Ceratium Mucor Merismopedia

21 Isomorphic growth 2.6c diameter,  m Weight 1/3, g 1/3 length, mm time, h time, d Amoeba proteus Prescott 1957 Saccharomyces carlsbergensis Berg & Ljunggren 1922 Pleurobrachia pileus Greve 1971 Toxostoma recurvirostre Ricklefs 1968 Weight 1/3, g 1/3

22 Mixtures of V0 & V1 morphs 4.2.3a volume,  m 3 hyphal length, mm time, h time, min Fusarium  = 0 Trinci 1990 Bacillus  = 0.2 Collins & Richmond 1962 Escherichia  = 0.28 Kubitschek 1990 Streptococcus  = 0.6 Mitchison 1961

23 Mixtures of changes in shape 4.2.4a Lichen Rhizocarpon V1- iso- V0-morph

24 Dynamic mixtures of V0- & V1-morphs V1-morph V0-morph Respiration: assim + maint + growth Assim, maint  mass Growth in diam  time at constant food

25 White at al 2011 Am. Nat., to appear Dynamic mixtures of V0- & V1-morphs 0.5 cm/yr 25 16 33 0.5 cm/yr 25 16 33 0.5 cm/yr 25 16 33 0.5 cm/yr 25 16 33 0.5 cm/yr 25 16 33 15 cm/yr Celleporella

26 Dynamic mixtures of V0- & V1-morphs White at al 2011 Am. Nat., to appear Celleporella 0.5 cm/yr 25 16 33 33, 24 cm/yr

27 add_my_pet Collection of data, DEB-parameters, properties: Species.xls http://www.bio.vu.nl/thb/deb/deblab/ 3 files per species, 68 species at 2011/09/29 mydata_my_pet real & pseudo-data, par-estimation, prediction-presentation, FIT predict_my_pet computes predictions given parameters pars_my_pet presents >100 implied properties Uses DEBtool (Matlab, Octave): add_my_pet.pdf (> 1000 functions & scripts) Lika et al 2011 J. Sea Res. to appear

28 Add_my_pet: Phyton_regius 2.8i weight, g time since birth, d Data by Bart Laarhoven

29 Allocation to soma 10.5.2 κκκ pop growth rate, d -1 max reprod rate, #d -1 survivor function Frequency distribution of κ among species in the add_my_pet collection: Median κ = 0.8, but optimum is κ = 0.5 Lika et al 2011 J. Sea Res, to appear

30 DEB tele course 2013 http://www.bio.vu.nl/thb/deb/ Free of financial costs; some 200 h effort investment Program for 2013: Feb 1 wk pre-course in tele-mode Feb/Mar 5 wk general theory in tele-mode April 15-23 course at NIOZ (Texel, NL) April 24-26 symposium at NIOZ (Texel, NL) Target audience: PhD students We encourage participation in groups who organize local meetings weekly Software package DEBtool for Octave/ Matlab freely downloadable Slides of this presentation are downloadable from http://www.bio.vu.nl/thb/users/bas/lectures/ Cambridge Univ Press 2009 Audience : thank you for your attention Lucas Molleman thank you for the invitation


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