Sustainability Times
26 May 2023, 16:24 GMT+10
We tend to be fascinated by the unusual, so the largest and smallest creatures invariably draw our attention. It turns out that nature, too, shows a similar bias as the planet's biomass is largely made up of organisms at both ends of the spectrum in size.
This is according to researchers from McGill University and the University of British Columbia in Canada, who spent five years analyzing data about the size of every type of living organism on the planet, from tiny bacteria to massive organisms like blue whales.
They found a pattern favoring large and small organisms held across all types of species. They say this was more pronounced in land-based organisms than in marine environments.
It also appears that maximum body size has the same upper limits across multiple species and environments, the scientists report in line with similar findings by other researchers.
"Trees, grasses, underground fungi, mangroves, corals, fish, and marine mammals all have similar maximum body sizes. This might suggest that there is a universal upper size limit due to ecological, evolutionary, or biophysical limitations," says Eden Tekwa, a research associate with McGill University's Department of Biology who was a lead author of the study.
"As for humans, we already know we comprise a relatively small biomass, but our size among all living things reveals our place in the global biome. We belong to the size range comprising the highest biomass, a relatively large body size," Tekwa adds.
Scientists say that cataloging nature's most common body sizes helps us better understand the natural world even as we continue to marvel at it.
"Life constantly amazes us, including the incredible range of sizes that it comes in. If the tiniest microbe was the size of the period at the end of this sentence, the largest living organism, a sequoia tree, would be the size of the Panama Canal," observes Malin Pinsky, an associate professor at the Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Natural Resources at Rutgers University.
The insights from this and other studies can also aid us in predicting the impacts of climate change and human activity on the planet's biomass, especially as much of that biomass is fast disappearing.
"For example, fish biomass is probably half of what it was before humans arrived, but it gets harder and harder to infer those patterns as we go farther back in time," Tekwa says. "We need to think about how the distribution of body size biomass will change under environmental pressures."
When it comes to survival, other scientists have noted, smaller, fast-breeding and more plentiful creatures such as mice and anchovies tend to have a marked benefit over slow-breeding giants like elephants and whales.
However, protecting all threatened and endangered species regardless of their size is the only way to ensure healthy biodiversity all over the planet.
The post - Nature favors the smallest and largest organisms appeared first on Sustainability Times.
Source: Sustainability Times
Get a daily dose of BC Post news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to BC Post.
More InformationOKLAHOMA CITY, Oklahoma: An Oklahoma school board has approved the application of the Catholic Church to establish the first religious ...
NEW YORK CITY, New York: In his second Twitter Spaces event for a 2024 White House candidate, Elon Musk hosted ...
WASHINGTON D.C.: Amtrak CEO Stephen Gardner said this week that despite projected losses of $800 million for the current budget ...
WASHINGTON D.C.: The Biden administration has announced that it is providing grants worth $570 million to eliminate many dangerous railroad ...
PARIS, France: According to a report by BFM TV, Britain's King Charles is considering a visit to France in September, ...
WASHINGTON D.C.: The Federal Aviation Administration has said that a drone sighting disrupted some flights at Pittsburgh International Airport this ...
New Delhi [India], June 10 (ANI): Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday expressed happiness with the performance of the Indian ...
BEIJING, June 10 (Xinhua) -- Here are the latest Chinese sports headlines from the past week:1. Torch relay for Chengdu ...
Miami [US], June 10 (ANI): Denver Nuggets defeated Miami Heat 108-95 in Game 4 of the NBA Finals at the ...
In two of their first three games since putting Aaron Judge on the injured list, the New York Yankees were ...
Chicago Cubs leadoff man Nick Madrigal and pretty much all Giants hitters not named Joc Pederson will look for improved ...
The Tampa Bay Rays will look for their eighth straight win on Saturday when they host the Texas Rangers in ...