Abstract
Plant ecologists have proposed a variety of optimization theories to explain the adaptive behaviour and evolution of plants from the perspective of natural selection ('survival of the fittest'). Optimization theories identify some objective function such as shoot or canopy photosynthesis, or growth rate which is maximized with respect to one or more plant functional traits. However, the link between these objective functions and individual plant fitness is seldom quantified and there remains some uncertainty about the most appropriate choice of objective function to use. Here, plants are viewed from an alternative thermodynamic perspective, as members of a wider class of non-equilibrium systems for which maximum entropy production (MEP) has been proposed as a common theoretical principle. I show how MEP unifies different plant optimization theories that have been proposed previously on the basis of ad hoc measures of individual fitness the different objective functions of these theories emerge as examples of entropy production on different spatiotemporal scales. The proposed statistical explanation of MEP, that states of MEP are by far the most probable ones, suggests a new and extended paradigm for biological evolution-survival of the likeliest' which applies from biomacromolecules to ecosystems, not just to individuals. copy; 2010 The Royal Society.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1429-1435 |
Number of pages | 7 |
Journal | Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences |
Volume | 365 |
Issue number | 1545 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 12 May 2010 |