Guo Kun, Wang Cai-Feng, Du Yu, Qu Yan-Fu, Braña Florentino, Ji Xiang
Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory for Water Environment and Marine Biological Resources Protection, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, Wenzhou University, Wenzhou 325035, Zhejiang, China.
Hainan Key Laboratory of Herpetological Research, College of Fisheries and Life Science, Hainan Tropical Ocean University, Sanya 572022, Hainan, China.
Curr Zool. 2022 Dec 7;69(2):192-199. doi: 10.1093/cz/zoac098. eCollection 2023 Apr.
Residual yolk is assumed to be an important source of energy and nutrients during early life in nonmammalian amniotes. Available data show that the mean size of residual yolk is far smaller in lizards than in turtles, snakes, crocodiles, and birds, raising a question of whether residual yolk is of functional significance in lizards. Here, we compared data from 26 lizard species with those from other nonmammalian amniotes to test the hypothesis that residual yolk is functionally less significant in species producing more fully developed offspring. In our sample, species mean offspring water contents ranged from 73% to 84% of body wet mass; species mean proportions of carcass dry mass, fat-body dry mass, and residual yolk dry mass to offspring dry mass ranged from 84% to 99%, 0% to 5.0%, and 0% to 14.4%, respectively. Lizards are, on average, more fully developed at hatching or birth than snakes, as revealed by the fact that the mean proportion of carcass dry mass to body dry mass and offspring water contents were both higher in lizards than in snakes. We conclude that the functional significance of residual yolk during early life is generally less evident in lizards. Even in the lizards where residual yolk is of potential functional significance, this portion of yolk contributes little, if any, to postembryonic growth. Future work could usefully collect data across a wider spectrum of reptile taxa to establish a precocial-altricial continuum and test the hypothesis that species with a smaller amount of residual yolk are closer to the precocial end of the continuum.
在非哺乳类羊膜动物的早期生活中,残余卵黄被认为是能量和营养的重要来源。现有数据表明,蜥蜴的残余卵黄平均大小远小于龟、蛇、鳄鱼和鸟类,这就引发了一个问题:残余卵黄在蜥蜴中是否具有功能意义。在这里,我们将26种蜥蜴的数据与其他非哺乳类羊膜动物的数据进行了比较,以检验以下假设:在产生发育更完全后代的物种中,残余卵黄的功能重要性较低。在我们的样本中,物种后代的平均含水量占身体湿重的73%至84%;物种的胴体干重、脂肪体干重和残余卵黄干重占后代干重的平均比例分别为84%至99%、0%至5.0%和0%至14.4%。正如蜥蜴的胴体干重占身体干重的平均比例和后代含水量均高于蛇这一事实所表明那样,蜥蜴在孵化或出生时平均比蛇发育得更完全。我们得出结论,残余卵黄在早期生活中的功能重要性在蜥蜴中通常不太明显。即使在残余卵黄具有潜在功能意义的蜥蜴中,这部分卵黄对胚胎后生长的贡献也微乎其微(如果有贡献的话)。未来的研究可以有益地收集更广泛的爬行动物类群的数据,以建立一个早成性 - 晚成性连续统,并检验残余卵黄量较少的物种更接近该连续统早成性一端的假设。