The effects of body mass on immune cell concentrations of mammals

2019 
AbstractTheory predicts that body mass should affect the way organisms evolve and use immune defenses. We investigated the relationship between body mass and blood neutrophil and lymphocyte concentrations among more than 250 terrestrial mammalian species. We tested whether existing theories (e.g., protecton theory, immune system complexity, and rate of metabolism) accurately predicted the scaling of immune cell concentrations. We also evaluated the predictive power of body mass for these leukocyte concentrations compared to sociality, diet, life history, and phylogenetic relatedness. Phylogeny explained >70% of variation in both lymphocytes and neutrophils, and body mass appeared more informative than other interspecific trait variation. In the best-fit mass-only model, neutrophils scaled hypermetrically (b=0.11) with body mass, whereas lymphocytes scaled just shallow of isometrically. Extrapolating to total cell numbers, this exponent means that an African elephant circulates 13.3 million times the neutr...
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