Predictions & Data for this entry
| Model: stx | climate: BSk, BWk | migrate: | phylum: |
| COMPLETE = 2.5 | ecozone: THp | food: bxM, xiHl | class: |
| MRE = 0.088 | habitat: 0iTi, 0iTs, 0iTa, 0iTd | gender: Dg | order: |
| SMSE = 0.017 | embryo: Tv | reprod: O | family: |
Zero-variate data
| Data | Observed | Predicted | (RE) | Unit | Description | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| tg | 175 | 175.1 | (0.0005062) | d | gestation time for female calves | AnAge |
| tx | 106 | 112.4 | (0.06014) | d | time since birth at weaning | AnAge |
| tp | 646 | 635.2 | (0.01673) | d | time since birth at puberty for females | AnAge |
| tpm | 746 | 743.7 | (0.003041) | d | time since birth at puberty for males | AnAge |
| am | 5950 | 5965 | (0.002565) | d | life span | AnAge |
| Wwb | 2625 | 2803 | (0.06766) | g | wet weight at birth | AnAge |
| Wwx | 1.35e+04 | 1.264e+04 | (0.06347) | g | wet weight at weaning | AnAge |
| Wwim | 4.85e+04 | 4.935e+04 | (0.01748) | g | ultimate wet weight for males | Wiki |
| Ri | 0.003562 | 0.003537 | (0.006942) | #/d | maximum reprod rate | AnAge |
Uni- and bivariate data
| Data | Figure | Independent variable | Dependent variable | (RE) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| tW_f | ![]() | time since birth | wet weight | (0.1348) | CunnSand2011 |
| tW_m | ![]() | time since birth | wet weight | (0.1521) | CunnSand2011 |
Pseudo-data at Tref = 20°C
| Data | Generalised animal | Gazella subgutturosa | Unit | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| v | 0.02 | 0.1833 | cm/d | energy conductance |
| p_M | 18 | 39.55 | J/d.cm^3 | vol-spec som maint |
| k_J | 0.002 | 0.002 | 1/d | maturity maint rate coefficient |
| k | 0.3 | 0.3958 | - | maintenance ratio |
| kap | 0.8 | 0.7088 | - | allocation fraction to soma |
| kap_G | 0.8 | 0.8018 | - | growth efficiency |
| kap_R | 0.95 | 0.95 | - | reproduction efficiency |
| t_0 | 0 | 76.53 | d | time at start development |
Discussion
- Males are assumed to differ from females by {p_Am} and E_Hp only
- slow foetal development is assumed
- mod_1: males have equal state variables at b, compared to females
Bibliography
