RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Universal scaling of maximum speed with body mass - Why the largest animals are not the fastest JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 095018 DO 10.1101/095018 A1 Hirt, Myriam R. A1 Jetz, Walter A1 Rall, Bjöern C. A1 Brose, Ulrich YR 2016 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/12/17/095018.abstract AB Speed is the fundamental constraint on animal movement, yet there is no general consensus on the determinants of maximum speed itself. Here, we provide a universal scaling model of maximum speed with body mass, which holds across locomotion modes, ecosystem types and taxonomic groups. In contrast to traditional power-law scaling, we predict a hump-shaped relationship due to a finite acceleration time for animals. This model is strongly supported by extensive empirical data (470 species with body masses ranging from 5.7×10−8 to 108,000 kg) from terrestrial as well as aquatic ecosystems. Our approach offers a novel concept of what determines the upper limit of animal movement, thus enabling a better understanding of realized movement patterns in nature and their multifold ecological consequences.