| Literature DB >> 24651275 |
Noah D Charney1, John J Castorino1, Megan J Dobro1, Sarah L Steely1.
Abstract
The length of embryo retention prior to oviposition is a critical evolutionary trait. In all oviparous salamanders, which include the vast majority of species in the order, fertilization is thought to occur at the time of egg laying. Embryos then enter the first cleavage stage several hours after being deposited. This pattern holds for previously studied individuals in the Ambystoma jeffersonianum-laterale complex. Here, we document an instance in which a female Ambystoma jeffersonianum-laterale was carrying embryos internally that had already reached stage 10 of development. Development likely began several days prior to the start of migration to the breeding pond. This is the first such record for any egg-laying salamander, and suggests a degree of plasticity in the timing of fertilization and development not previously recognized. Further work is needed to ascertain the prevalence, mechanics, and evolutionary significance of this phenomenon.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24651275 PMCID: PMC3961271 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0091919
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Reproductive strategies among extant amphibian species.
Numbers represent estimates of the total number of species in each group, the percent of known species thought to have internal fertilization, and the number of species thought to be either viviparous or ovoviviparous. In groups with no number in the “viviparous or ovoviviparous” column, all species are oviparous. The * denotes a single oviparous species with unconfirmed accounts of it giving birth to free swimming larvae under abnormal laboratory conditions [12], [13]. Salamander families are shown in black, and the current study focuses on species in the Ambystomatidae family. Branch lengths are not meaningful [6], [9], [31]–[33].
Figure 2Ambystoma jeffersonianum-laterale embryos.
A) Typical Ambystoma jeffersonianum-laterale eggs in cleavage stage 4 laid in a pond in western Massachusetts. B) A portion of a clutch extracted from a road-killed unisexual Ambystoma jeffersonianum-laterale. C) Fluorescence image of a DAPI-stained embryo from the clutch of the road-killed individual in approximately development stage 10. The blue dots are cell nuclei, the pink dots are surface reflections of the light source. D) A sectioned embryo showing a fluid-filled center with nuclei distributed around the periphery. E) A close up of nuclei in an embryo.