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      Energetic constraints on the diet of terrestrial carnivores.

      Nature
      Animals, Body Constitution, Carnivora, physiology, Diet, Energy Metabolism, Invertebrates, Models, Biological, Predatory Behavior

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          Abstract

          Species in the mammalian order Carnivora exhibit a huge diversity of life histories with body sizes spanning more than three orders of magnitude. Despite this diversity, most terrestrial carnivores can be classified as either feeding on invertebrates and small vertebrates or on large vertebrates. Small carnivores feed predominantly on invertebrates probably because they are a superabundant resource (sometimes 90% of animal biomass); however, intake rates of invertebrate feeders are low, about one tenth of those of vertebrate feeders. Although small carnivores can subsist on this diet because of low absolute energy requirements, invertebrate feeding appears to be unsustainable for larger carnivores. Here we show, by reviewing the most common live prey in carnivore diets, that there is a striking transition from feeding on small prey (less than half of predator mass) to large prey (near predator mass), occurring at predator masses of 21.5-25 kg. We test the hypothesis that this dichotomy is the consequence of mass-related energetic requirements and we determine the predicted maximum mass that an invertebrate diet can sustain. Using a simple energetic model and known invertebrate intake rates, we predict a maximum sustainable mass of 21.5 kg, which matches the point where predators shift from small to large prey.

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          Most cited references13

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          How many species are there on Earth?

          R M May (1988)
          This article surveys current answers to the factual question posed in the title and reviews the kinds of information that are needed to make these answers more precise. Various factors affecting diversity are also reviewed. These include the structure of food webs, the relative abundance of species, the number of species and of individuals in different categories of body size, along with other determinants of the commonness and rarity of organisms.
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            The Little Things That Run the world* (The Importance and Conservation of Invertebrates)

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              Carnivore body size: Ecological and taxonomic correlates

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                10580498
                10.1038/46266

                Chemistry
                Animals,Body Constitution,Carnivora,physiology,Diet,Energy Metabolism,Invertebrates,Models, Biological,Predatory Behavior

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