What is the status of metabolic theory one century after Pütter invented
the von Bertalanffy growth curve?
Abstract
Growth models are a fundamental aspect of metabolic theory but remain
controversial. It is a century since the first theoretical model of
growth was put forward by Pütter. His insights were deep, but his model
ended up being attributed to von Bertalanffy and his ideas largely
forgotten. Here I review Pütter’s ideas and trace their influence on
existing theoretical models for growth and other aspects of metabolism,
including those of von Bertalanffy, the Dynamic Energy Budget (DEB)
theory, the Gill-Oxygen Limitation Theory and the Ontogenetic Growth
Model (OGM). I then synthesise, compare and critique the ideas of the
two most comprehensive theories, DEB and the OGM, in relation to
Pütter’s original ideas, and discuss how these theories have been used
to explain ‘macrometabolic’ patterns including the scaling of
respiration, the temperature size rule (first modelled by Pütter), and
the connection to life history. Although theoretical work on growth and
metabolism has generally proceeded in an un-coordinated and disconnected
fashion, significant progress has been made and it has been built upon
the original and fundamental insights of Pütter. What we need now is a
coordinated empirical research program to test the existing ideas and
motivate new theoretical directions.