Hatching plasticity is associated with a more advanced stage at hatching
in an Ambystoma with terrestrial eggs
- Kimberly Treadaway,
- Rebecca Hale
Kimberly Treadaway
University of North Carolina Asheville
Author ProfileAbstract
Hatching plasticity allows fish and amphibians to initiate hatching in
response to environmental cues including predation, flooding, and
hypoxia. In species with terrestrial eggs, hatching plasticity often
manifests as extended development of embryos when water is not
available. Although these effects are taxonomically widespread, little
attention has focused on differences in plasticity across closely
related species with terrestrial and aquatic embryos. We propose that
terrestrial embryonic environment that favors slower and extended
development that, together, result in a more advanced stage at hatching
than an aquatic embryonic environment. We test this hypothesis by
comparing embryonic development between two fall-breeding mole
salamanders, Ambystoma opacum and A. annulatum. Most Ambystoma lay eggs
submerged in ponds but A. opacum lays its eggs on land, where hatching
is triggered when eggs are submerged by rising pond levels. We compared
embryonic development of A. opacum with A. annulatum, which lays eggs in
water, in a common laboratory environment. Embryos of both species were
reared in environments simulating either aquatic or terrestrial nests
sites. We found that the A. opacum embryos exhibited slower development
and took longer to hatch than A. annulatum embryos. We also found that
A. opacum hatched at a more advanced stage, but only when reared in an
environment that mimicked a terrestrial nest. This plasticity was absent
in A. annulatum. Our results suggest that the terrestrial-laying A.
opacum has evolved a developmental plasticity that allows its embryos to
extend development when in terrestrial nests, while retaining the
ability to hatch at a stage more typical of congeners when submerged in
water.31 Oct 2023Submitted to Ecology and Evolution 02 Nov 2023Submission Checks Completed
02 Nov 2023Assigned to Editor
03 Nov 2023Reviewer(s) Assigned
03 Feb 20241st Revision Received
12 Feb 2024Submission Checks Completed
12 Feb 2024Assigned to Editor
12 Feb 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
14 Feb 2024Reviewer(s) Assigned