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Effects of low‐oxygen conditions on embryo growth in the painted turtle,Chrysemys picta
Authors:Gerardo A. CORDERO  Matthew L. KARNATZ  Jon C. SVENDSEN  Eric J. GANGLOFF
Affiliation:1. Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa, USA;2. Technical University of Denmark, National Institute of Aquatic Resources, Silkeborg, Denmark;3. Interdisciplinary Centre of Marine and Environmental Research, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal
Abstract:Low‐oxygen conditions (hypoxia; <21% O2) are considered unfavorable for growth; yet, embryos of many vertebrate taxa develop successfully in hypoxic subterranean environments. Although enhanced tolerance to hypoxia has been demonstrated in adult reptiles, such as in the painted turtle (Chrysemys picta), its effects on sensitive embryo life stages warrant attention. We tested the hypothesis that short‐term hypoxia negatively affects growth during day 40 of development in C. picta, when O2 demands are highest in embryos. A brief, but severe, hypoxic event (5% O2 for 0.5 h) moderately affected embryo growth, causing a 13% reduction in mass (relative to a normoxic control). The same condition had no effect during day 27; instead, a nearly anoxic event (1% O2 for 72 h) caused a 5% mass reduction. All embryos survived the egg incubation period. Our study supports the assumption that reptilian embryos are resilient to intermittently low O2 in subterranean nests. Further work is needed to ascertain responses to suboptimal O2 levels while undergoing dynamic changes in developmental physiology.
Keywords:embryo metabolism  embryo respiration  growth rate  nest environment  oxygen consumption rate
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