Metabolic rate has been described as "the most fundamental biological rate" as it links individual organisms to the ecology of populations, communities, and ecosystems (Savage et al., 2004). It is central to many biological and ecological processes, and many metabolic theories exist to explain these connections (Kearney & White, 2012; Van der Meer, 2006). Metabolic rate has been used to predict individual growth (West et al., 2001), food-web structure (Brown & Gillooly, 2003), and global patterns of abundance (Kaspari, 2004), among other things. While historically studies have primarily measured metabolic rates under constrained laboratory conditions,