| Literature DB >> 32723314 |
Marissa Fabrezi1, Julio César Cruz2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Before metamorphosis, almost all anuran tadpoles are omnivores. Larval carnivory occurs in some species and, it is associated with distinctive morphotypes. Obligatory carnivorous tadpoles exhibit structural changes in the gastrointestinal tract compared to larvae that are predominately omnivores. The most distinctive feature of the anuran family Ceratophyridae (three genera) overall is the enormous gape of adults. This feature increases their ability to capture extremely large and active prey. The larvae of Ceratophyrid genera are remarkably distinct from each other and carnivory has diversified in a manner unseen in other anurans. The larvae of one genus, Lepidobatrachus, has a massive gape like the adult. Herein, we report on larval developmental variation, diet, gross morphology of the gastrointestinal tract, and histology of the cranial segment of the gut before, during and after metamorphosis in larval series for the following ceratophryid species: Chacophrys pierottii, Ceratophrys cranwelli, Lepidobatrachus laevis and Lepidobatrachus llanensis.Entities:
Keywords: Carnivory; Horned frog; Larvae; Metamorphosis; Plasticity; Size
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32723314 PMCID: PMC7388516 DOI: 10.1186/s12861-020-00221-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Dev Biol ISSN: 1471-213X Impact factor: 1.978
Fig. 1Larval growth in ceratophryid species. a. Chacophrys pierottii has two growth trajectories. Large tadpoles metamorphose in two weeks. This size variation could be influenced by food quality and/or pond desiccation. b. Ceratophrys cranwelli also has accelerated growth compared to non-ceratophryids species with a rapid larval development completed in three weeks. c. Lepidobatrachus llanensis and d. L. laevis. Lepidobatrachus spp. have particularly large and fast-growing tadpoles. Tadpoles of Lepidobatrachus reach the end of metamorphosis in two weeks. Intraspecific size variation seems to be related to food quantity. Ceratophryid frogs all reproduce explosively once a year at the beginning of the wet and warm season
Fig. 2Gut contents in ceratophryid tadpoles. a. Food content in the foregut of the small tadpole (Stage 37) of Chacophrys pierottii, the presence of small particles of detritus and macerated shrimp are observed. b. Ventral view of the coiled gut in a large tadpole of Ch. pierottii (Stage 37). Shrimps are observed by transparency. c. Detail of the macerated shrimp, pieces of wood and filamentous of algae in the gut of the specimen shown in b. d. Gut content in a tadpole of C. cranwelli (Stage 37), in which pieces of tadpoles are predominant. e. Diet during larval stages in Lepidobatrachus llanensis and L. laevis. Stomachs are full of food at all larval stages in both species. Furthermore, the whole alimentary tracts contain digested organic matter. Crustaceans and tadpoles are frequent. Occasionally, tadpoles of these species may eat insects and snails
Number of prey during different life larval stages in Lepidobatrachus spp.
| Species | Stages | n | Anurans | Crustaceans | Mollusks | Insects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Limb bud | 8 | – | Larvae (2) | |||
| Digit differentiation | 7 | – | – | |||
| Limb growth | 19 | Hemiptera (2), Coleoptera (5), Hymenoptera (1) | ||||
| Metamorphosis | 14 | Coleoptera (16) Larvae (2) | ||||
| Limb bud | 4 | – | – | – | ||
| Digit differentiation | 4 | – | Larvae (2) | |||
| Limb growth | 14 | – | Coleoptera (3), larvae (3) | |||
| Metamorphosis | 7 | – | Coleoptera (5) | |||
| Indet (2) | Larvae (1) |
Fig. 3Gross morphology of the gastrointestinal tract within ceratophryids. a. Tadpole of Chacophrys pierottii at Gosner Stage 29, ventral and dorsal views showing the abdominal cavity and the coiled gastrointestinal tube. The long intestine shows little regional specialization, with a short anterior segment that has a reticulated surface different from the intestine that is smooth with longitudinal stretches. b. Tadpole of Ceratophrys cranwelli at Gosner Stage 30, visceral morphology in ventral view. The gastrointestinal tract is shorter with differentiated anterior sac and the ampulla of the rectum. The esophagus has longitudinal folds and it is dorsal in respect to the stomach. The adult-like stomach is transparent with a “glandular” surface. c. Tadpole of Lepidobtrachus llanensis at Gosner Stage 32, the stomach occupies the half of the abdominal cavity. The gastrointestinal tract is short. The esophagus is dorsal and has longitudinal folds. The stomach has a dense pattern of glands and the gastrointestinal loop delimits the stomach from the pyloric region. The epithelium of the intestine is smooth with some aligned cells
Variation of body length and intestine length (in millimeters) during larval development within Ceratophryids
| Species | Stage | n | Body Length (BL) | Hind Gut Length (HGL) | HGL/BL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Limb bud | 5 | 9,22 (±0.53) | 95.64 (±15.61) | ≈ 10 | |
| Limb growth | 5a | 25.43 (±1.84) | 305.58 (±92.5) | ≈ 12 | |
| 5b | 38.25 (±4.28) | 633.6 (±196.72) | ≈ 16.56 | ||
| Metamorphosis | 3a | 23.84 (±3.20) | 172.88 (±67.47) | ≈ 7.4 | |
| 3b | 36.51 (±1.73) | 120.06 (±75.62) | ≈ 3.2 | ||
| Limb bud | 6 | 11.73 (±1.40) | 51.39 (±10.05) | ≈ 4.5 | |
| Limb growth | 6 | 23.80 (±1.45) | 81.94 (±8.4) | ≈ 3.5 | |
| Metamorphosis | 2 | 28.77 | 52.5 | ≈ 1.8 | |
| Limb bud | 5 | 13.36 (±1.12) | 33.89 (±3.34) | ≈2 | |
| Limb growth | 10 | 25.062 (±5.17) | 51.83 (±14.80) | ≈2 | |
| Metamorphosis | 10 | 40.26 (±4.8) | 118.55 (±22.86) | ≈ 2.9 | |
| Limb bud | 6 | 13.85 (±2.61) | 27.05 (± 4.80) | ≈ 2 | |
| Limb growth | 15 | 37.38 (±6.11) | 102.59 (± 30.64) | ≈ 2.7 | |
| Metamorphosis | 17 | 46.17 (±4.06) | 131.65 (±17.30) | ≈ 2.85 |
In Chacophrys pierotti, super index (a) refers to small tadpoles and super index (b) to large tadpoles. Length of intestine was measure between the pyloric loop and end of the intestine into the vent tube/cloaca. Before the metamorphosis, the intestine is very large in Chacophrys pierottii, short in Ceratophrys cranwelli and very short in Lepidobatrachus spp. During metamorphosis, the intestine shortens abruptly in Chacophrys and Ceratophrys whereas it conserves its larval length in Lepidobatrachus spp
Fig. 4Light microscopy micrographs of the foregut of Chacophrys pierottii. a. Section of the esophagus in an advanced larval stage (Stage 39) shows a thin mucosa with ciliated cells and columnar mucous cells (PAS-positive). b and c. Panoramic and detailed sections of the esophagus in a froglet showing folds of mucosa lined by a ciliated epithelium with numerous goblet cells. d and e. Panoramic and detailed sections of the larval “stomach” (i.e. the maniccotto glandulare) exhibit the fundic region with numerous gastric glands and some goblet cells (PAS-positive) in an advanced larval stage (Stage 39). f. Middle stomach section with folded mucosa and numerous gastric glands with different types of glandular cells in the froglet. g. Amplification of F-image showing gastric glands with mucous neck cells (PAS-positive) at the upper portion and oxynticopeptic cells (*) at the lower portion. h. Section at the level of the pyloric region there are small simple tubular gastric glands in the froglet. Abbreviations: Ec: epithelial cells; Gc: goblets cell; Gg: gastric glands; Gp: gastric pits; Me: muscularis externa; Mm: muscularis mucosa; Mnc: mucous neck cells; Sm: submucosa
Fig. 5Light microscopy micrographs of the foregut of Ceratophrys cranwelli. a and b. Panoramic and detailed sections of the esophagus in advanced larval stage (Stage 39) showing ciliated and goblets cells (PAS-positive) in the lining epithelium. c and d. Panoramic and detail sections of the dilated cranial segment of the gut in an advanced larvae stage (Stage 39) to display the fundic region with numerous gastric glands and some goblet cells (PAS-positive). e. Sections of the transitional zone between the esophageal-like region and the fundic region with some gastric glands in a specimen at the end of metamorphosis (Stage 46). f. Section of the middle stomach showing a folded mucosa and numerous gastric glands in a specimen at the end of metamorphosis (Stage 46). The mucous glands are PAS-positive. g. A section at the level of the pyloric region with few PAS-positive goblets cells in advanced larval stage (Stage 39). h. Section at the level of the pyloric region has some small simple tubular gastric glands in a specimen at the end of the metamorphosis (Stage 46). Abbreviations: Ec: epithelial cells; Gc: goblets cell; Gg: gastric glands; Gp: gastric pits; Me: muscularis externa; Mm: muscularis mucosa; Mnc: mucous neck cells; Sm: submucosa
Fig. 6Light microscopy micrographs of the foregut of Lepidobatrachus spp. a. L. llanensis. Section of the esophagus with ciliated cells and numerous goblet cells forming the lining epithelium in an early limb bud larval stage. b. L. llanensis. Sections of the transitional zone from the esophagus to middle stomach showing gastric glands and the submucosa layer thickened in at the end of larval period. c. L. llanensis. Section from the middle of the stomach showing different types of glandular cells, and mucous glands already differentiated (PAS-positive) in the fundic region in tadpoles at an early limb bud larval stage. d. L. llanensis. Section of the middle stomach exhibiting increment of folds, gastric glands, the connective tissue in the submucosa and outer circular muscular layer thickened at the end of larval period. e. L. laevis. Section of the fundic region displaying simple tubular gastric glands formed by mucous neck cells at the upper portion of the gland and oxynticopeptic cells (*) at the lower portion in an advanced tadpole stage without vent tube. The staining is PAS and AB combined. f. L. llanensis. Section of the fundic region with granular material of oxynticopeptic cells (*) revealed by Masson’s trichrome method at the end of larval period. g. L. llanensis. Section at the level of the pyloric region with a remarkable thickness of circular muscles in the muscular layer in an early limb bud larval stage. h. L. llanensis. Section at the level of pyloric region denotes the increment in the thickness of the wall of the gut at the end of larval period. Abbreviations: Ec: epithelial cells; Gc: goblets cell; Gg: gastric glands; Gp: gastric pits; Me: muscularis externa; mnc: mucous neck cells; Sm: submucosa
Fig. 7An evolutionary hypothesis regarding the sequence in which developmental variation evolved in ceratophryid lineage with consequences in the suppression of metamorphosis of the gastrointestinal tract in Lepidobatrachus studied herein. The phylogenetic relationships were based on molecular data for the whole clade [43]. In comparisons with other frogs, development in extant ceratophryids have accelerated rates of differentiation and growth as larvae which may be influenced by TH signals [13, 15]. Data from the thyroid gland’s histomorphology during larval development indicate however that ceratophryids have low secretory activity at early larval stages suggesting that maternal nutrients and/or diet are possible sources for TH precursors for precocious development [31]. Developmental plasticity led to three larval eco-morphotypes that may breeding simultaneously in the same pond. There is a distinct metamorphosis from the larval to adult gastrointestinal tract in the carnivore tadpole of Ceratophrys and the omnivore tadpole of Chacophrys similar to what occurs in most anurans. In Lepidobatrachus, in contrast, the larval gastrointestinal tract is quite similar to that of the adult without abrupt stomach differentiation and intestine shortening at metamorphosis. Furthermore, diet and feeding behavior in larval and adult stages are similar