Skip to main content
No AccessFocused Collection: Evolution and Advantages of Endothermy

Locomotor Mode, Maximum Running Speed, and Basal Metabolic Rate in Placental Mammals

School of Biological and Conservation Sciences, University of KwaZulu‐Natal, Private Bag X01, Scottsville 3209, South Africa

The locomotor performance (absolute maximum running speed [MRS]) of 120 mammals was analyzed for four different locomotor modes (plantigrade, digitigrade, unguligrade, and lagomorph‐like) in terms of body size and basal metabolic rate (BMR). Analyses of conventional species data showed that the MRS of plantigrade and digitigrade mammals and lagomorphs increases with body mass, whereas that of unguligrade mammals decreases with body mass. These trends were confirmed in plantigrade mammals and lagomorphs using phylogenetically independent contrasts. Multiple regression analyses of MRS contrasts (dependent variable) as a function of body mass and BMR contrasts (predictor variables) revealed that BMR was a significant predictor of MRS in the complete data set, as well as in plantigrade and nonplantigrade mammals. However, there was severe multicollinearity in the nonplantigrade model that may influence the interpretation of these models. Although these data show mass‐independent correlation between BMR and MRS, they are not necessarily indicative of a cause‐effect relationship. However, the analyses do identify a negligible role of body size associated with MRS once phylogenetic and BMR effects are controlled, suggesting that the body size increase in large mammals over time (i.e., Cope’s rule) can probably rule out MRS as a driving variable.