The fourth dimension of life: fractal geometry and allometric scaling of organisms

GB West, JH Brown, BJ Enquist - science, 1999 - science.org
science, 1999science.org
Fractal-like networks effectively endow life with an additional fourth spatial dimension. This
is the origin of quarter-power scaling that is so pervasive in biology. Organisms have
evolved hierarchical branching networks that terminate in size-invariant units, such as
capillaries, leaves, mitochondria, and oxidase molecules. Natural selection has tended to
maximize both metabolic capacity, by maximizing the scaling of exchange surface areas,
and internal efficiency, by minimizing the scaling of transport distances and times. These …
Fractal-like networks effectively endow life with an additional fourth spatial dimension. This is the origin of quarter-power scaling that is so pervasive in biology. Organisms have evolved hierarchical branching networks that terminate in size-invariant units, such as capillaries, leaves, mitochondria, and oxidase molecules. Natural selection has tended to maximize both metabolic capacity, by maximizing the scaling of exchange surface areas, and internal efficiency, by minimizing the scaling of transport distances and times. These design principles are independent of detailed dynamics and explicit models and should apply to virtually all organisms.
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