Biphasic allometry of cardiac growth in the developing Kangaroo Macropus fuliginosus

E.P. Snelling, D.A. Taggart, Shane Maloney, A.P. Farrell, R.S. Seymour

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    16 Citations (Scopus)
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    Abstract

    © 2015 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved. Interspecific studies of adult mammals show that heart mass (Mh, g) increases in direct proportion to body mass (Mb, kg), such that Mh ∝ Mb. However, intraspecific studies on heart mass in mammals at different stages of development reveal considerable variation between species, Mh ∝ M. Part of this variation may arise as a result of the narrow body size range of growing placental mammals, from birth to adulthood. Marsupial mammals are born relatively small and offer an opportunity to examine the ontogeny of heart mass over a much broader body size range. Data from 29 western grey kangaroos Macropus fuliginosus spanning 800-fold in body mass (0.084–67.5 kg) reveal the exponent for heart mass decreases significantly when the joey leaves the pouch (ca. 5–6 kg body mass). In the pouch, the heart mass of joeys scales with hyperallometry, Mh(in-pouch) = 6.39M, whereas in free-roaming juveniles and adults, heart mass scales with hypoallometry, Mh(postpouch) = 14.2M. Measurements of heart height, width, and depth support this finding. The relatively steep heart growth allometry during in-pouch development is consistent with the increase in relative cardiac demands as joeys develop endothermy and the capacity for hopping locomotion. Once out of the pouch, the exponent decreases sharply, possibly because the energy required for hopping is independent of speed, and the efficiency of energy storage during hopping increases as the kangaroo grows. The right: left ventricular mass ratios (0.30–0.35) do not change over the body mass range and are similar to those of other mammals, reflecting the principle of Laplace for the heart.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)216-225
    Number of pages10
    JournalPhysiological and Biochemical Zoology
    Volume88
    Issue number2
    Early online date8 Jan 2015
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Mar 2015

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