Monday, December 8, 2025
News

Nature favours creatures in all sizes: Study

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

Washington | May 16, 2023 2:08:34 PM IST
Surveying the body sizes of Earth's living organisms, researchers from McGill University and the University of British Columbia found that the planet's biomass -- the material that makes up all living organisms -- is concentrated in organisms at either end of the size spectrum.

The researchers spent five years compiling and analyzing data about the size and biomass of every type of living organism on the planet -- from tiny one-celled organisms like soil archaea and bacteria to large organisms like blue whales and sequoia trees.

They found that the pattern favouring large and small organisms held across all types of species and was more pronounced in land-based organisms than in marine environments. Interestingly, maximum body size seemed to reach the same upper limits across multiple species and environments.

"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 lead author Eden Tekwa, a former postdoctoral fellow at University of British Columbia and now a research associate with McGill University's department of biology.

"Life constantly amazes us, including the incredible range of sizes that it comes in," says co-author Malin Pinsky, an associate professor in the department of ecology, evolution, and natural resources at Rutgers University. "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."

"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 that comprises the highest biomass, which is a relatively large body size," says Tekwa.

Predicting the effects of climate change

Cataloguing which body sizes are most common is a key step towards understanding the world around us, say the authors. These results also have important implications for predicting the impacts of climate change and human activity on the planet's biomass.

"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," says Tekwa. "We need to think about how the distribution of body size biomass will change under environmental pressures." (ANI)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS ()
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE SCIENCE NEWS
New data reveals one of the smallest ozo...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
Kerala: Retd IPS officer B Sandhya on ac...
Goa Nightclub Fire: Families in Jharkhan...
Delhi's air quality remains in 'very poo...
Congress MP Saptagiri Ulaka seeks discus...
Mumbai wakes up to morning haze, AQI at ...
'RSS, BJP don't have the right to speak ...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
Ignite IAS Opens Admissions for 202... 
CyberMindr at DSCI AISS 2025: CTO, ... 
Costs of veg, non-veg thalis dip 13... 
Loki's Studio Leading the Promotion... 
NIA court extends custody of 4 accu... 
Uttarakhand CM Dhami expresses cond... 
IDFC FIRST Bank launches FIRST WOW!... 
Germany commits EUR1.3 billion to I...