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Effects of Constant versus Fluctuating Incubation Temperatures on Hatching Success, Incubation Length, and Hatchling Morphology in the Chinese Skink (Plestiodon chinensis) 被引量:5
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作者 Wen SHEN Jianchi PEI +1 位作者 Longhui LIN Xiang JI 《Asian Herpetological Research》 SCIE CSCD 2017年第4期262-268,共7页
We incubated eggs ofPlestiodon chinensis under five constant (24, 26, 28, 30, and 32 ℃) and one fluctuating thermal regimes to examine the effects of constant versus fluctuating incubation temperatures on hatching ... We incubated eggs ofPlestiodon chinensis under five constant (24, 26, 28, 30, and 32 ℃) and one fluctuating thermal regimes to examine the effects of constant versus fluctuating incubation temperatures on hatching success, incubation length, and hatchling morphology. The duration of incubation varied considerably among the six temperature treatments, whereas hatching success did not. The mean incubation length decreased as temperature increased in a nonlinear way, and increased as the thermal variance increased. Incubation temperature affected the body size (linear length and mass) and shape of hatchlings, with eggs incubated at 26, 28, and 30 ℃ producing larger and heavier hatchlings than did those incubated at 24 ℃, 32 ℃, or fluctuating temperatures. Our results showed that exposure of P. chinensis eggs to extreme temperatures for brief periods of time did not increase embryonic mortality and, in the fluctuating-temperature treatment, the thermal variance affected hatchling morphology more evidently than the thermal mean. Our results highlight the importance of the thermal variance in affecting embryonic development and hatchling morphology, and add further evidence that temperatures within the range of 26-30 ℃ are optimal for P. chinensis embryos. 展开更多
关键词 Developmental plasticity egg incubation hatchling phenotype scincid lizard thermal variance thermal mean
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Tail loss affects fecundity but not offspring traits in the Chinese skink Eumeces chinensis 被引量:6
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作者 Hongliang LU Jianfang GAO +2 位作者 Xiaohao MA Zhihua LIN Xiang JI 《Current Zoology》 SCIE CAS CSCD 2012年第2期228-235,共8页
We used the Chinese skink Eumeces chinensis as a model animal to study the effects of tail loss on reproductive in- vestment and offspring traits. A total of 147 wild-captured adult females were divided into four grou... We used the Chinese skink Eumeces chinensis as a model animal to study the effects of tail loss on reproductive in- vestment and offspring traits. A total of 147 wild-captured adult females were divided into four groups according to their tail con- ditions. Tail breaks occurred most frequently in the proximal portion of the tail and least frequently in the distal portion, with the middle portion in between. This finding suggests that tail breaks occurring in nature often entails substantial energetic costs in E. chinensis where the tail is a major site of energy storage. The proportion of females that laid eggs was higher in females with in- tact or completely regenerated tails than in those with broken tails. Following whole-tail autotomy, the clutch size was reduced by 17%, and the clutch mass was reduced by 14%. Females undergoing substantial tail autotomy reduced reproductive investment, and they did so by reducing the number but not the size of eggs produced. None of the egg and hatchling traits was affected by tail loss. Comparing our data with those reported for other oviparous and viviparous skinks allows us to draw two general conclu- sions: one is that fecundity (clutch or litter size) is affected by tail loss in all species so far studied, whereas offspring size is af- fected by tail loss in some species, but not in others; the other is that the reduction in fecundity following tail loss is more evident in species lacking abdominal fat bodies 展开更多
关键词 scincid lizard Costs of tail autotomy FECUNDITY Offspring size Morphology Locomotor performance
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Does the variance of incubation temperatures always constitute a significant selective force for origin of reptilian viviparity? 被引量:5
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作者 Hong LI Zheng WANG +1 位作者 Ce CHEN Xiang JI 《Current Zoology》 SCIE CAS CSCD 2012年第6期812-819,共8页
To test the hypothesis that the variance of incubation temperature may have constituted a significant selective force for reptilian viviparity, we incubated eggs of the slender forest skink Scincella modesta in five t... To test the hypothesis that the variance of incubation temperature may have constituted a significant selective force for reptilian viviparity, we incubated eggs of the slender forest skink Scincella modesta in five thermally different natural nests and at two constant temperatures (18℃ and 21 ℃). Our manipulation of incubation temperature had significant effects on incubation length and several hatchling traits (snout-vent length, tail length, fore-limb length, and sprint speed), but not on hatching success and other hatchling traits examined (body mass, head size, and hind-limb length). Incubation length was nonlinearly sensitive to temperature, but it was not correlated with the thermal variance when holding the thermal mean constant. The 18 ℃ treatment not only produced smaller sized hatchlings but also resulted in decreased sprint speed. Eggs in the nest with the greatest proportion of temperatures higher than 28 ℃ also produced smaller sized hatchlings. None of the hatchling traits examined was affected by the thermal variance. Thermal fluctuations did result in longer incubation times, but females would benefit little from maintaining stable body temperatures or selecting thermally stable nests in terms of the reduced incubation length. Our data show that the mean rather than the variance of temperatures has a key role in influencing incubation length and hatchling phenotypes, and thus do not support the hypothesis tested . 展开更多
关键词 VIVIPARITY scincid lizard Developmental plasticity PHENOTYPE Incubation length Thermal
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Embryonic Growth and Yolk Depletion during Incubation in the Chinese Skink, Plestiodon chinensis
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作者 Li MA Kun GUO +1 位作者 Shan SU Xiang JI 《Asian Herpetological Research》 SCIE CSCD 2019年第1期56-61,共6页
We collected 24 gravid female Chinese skinks(Plestiodon chinensis) to study embryonic growth and yolk depletion during incubation. Females laid eggs between late May and mid-June. Eggs were incubated at 24(± 0.3)... We collected 24 gravid female Chinese skinks(Plestiodon chinensis) to study embryonic growth and yolk depletion during incubation. Females laid eggs between late May and mid-June. Eggs were incubated at 24(± 0.3) ℃. One egg from each clutch was dissected at 5-d intervals starting at laying. Embryonic stages at laying varied from Dufaure and Hubert's(1961) Stage 30-35, with a mean stage of 32.6. Incubation lengths at 24 ℃ varied from 35.1 to 48.3 d, with a mean of 41.5 d. Based on the derived functions describing instantaneous changes in embryo dry mass and yolk dry mass, we identified three phases of embryonic growth or yolk depletion in P. chinensis. Phase 1, from Day 0(at laying) to Day 15(~36% of the way through incubation), was one of minimal transfer of material from yolk to embryo. Phase 2, from Day 15 to Day 32-33(~77%-80% of the way through incubation), was characterized by increasingly rapid embryonic growth or yolk depletion. Phase 3, from Day 32-33 to hatching, was characterized by reduced embryonic growth or yolk depletion. The length of the last embryonic stage(Stage 40 = completely differentiated embryos) accounted for about 28% of incubation length, and the dry mass of the smallest embryos of Stage 40 accounted for only ~48% of the hatchling dry mass. Our study adds evidence to the idea that oviposition is not timed to coincide with the onset of rapid embryonic growth in oviparous reptiles, and is first to demonstrate that ~50% embryonic growth occurs in the last quarter of incubation in P. chinensis. 展开更多
关键词 egg INCUBATION EMBRYONIC GROWTH EMBRYONIC stage Plestiodon CHINENSIS scincid lizard YOLK depletion
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