4.5 Article

The eggshell structure in apteryx; form, function, and adaptation

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 11, Issue 7, Pages 3184-3202

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.7266

Keywords

Apteryx; embryonic gas exchange; incubation physiology; Kiwi eggs; water vapour conductance

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The study found differences in eggshell water vapor conductance between different species of Apteryx, correlated with their respective altitudes; it also showed a significant increase in water vapor conductance late in incubation compared to unincubated eggs. The research also described new features such as triangular mineral particles and plugged pores in the eggshell, which provide necessary microbial protection for a species with a long incubation period.
Apteryx is a genus of flightless birds endemic to New Zealand known to lay very large eggs in proportion to body weight. The eggshell of Apteryx is unusually thin and less porous than allometrically expected possibly as a compensation for a very long incubation period. Past studies have been carried out on Apteryx australis, a species which once comprised all kiwi with brown plumage, now separated into three distinct species. These species use different habitats and live at different latitudes and altitudes, therefore generating a need to revise our knowledge of the attributes of their eggshells. In this study, we measured the physical characteristics and water conductance on eggshell fragments of these three species and Great-spotted Kiwi and relate them to the environmental conditions of their respective environments; we also measured the water vapor conductance of Brown Kiwi eggs of late stages of incubation. We found that several trade-offs exist between incubation behavior, environmental conditions, and eggshell structure. We found differences between species in eggshell water vapor conductance seemingly related to altitude; Brown Kiwi and Rowi generally inhabiting lower altitudes had the highest conductance and Tokoeka, generally living in montane environments, the lowest. This is achieved by an increased eggshell thickness rather than a pore area reduction. Finally, the water vapor conductance late in incubation was 58% higher than infertile unincubated eggs, suggesting a drastic increase in conductance throughout the long incubation period. Using the values previously reported, we calculated the embryonic eggshell thinning to be 32.5% at the equatorial region of the eggshell. We describe several new features, such as triangular mineral particles in the cuticle, reported for the extinct Trigonoolithus amoei, and confirmed the existence of plugged pores. We suggest that these structures provide microbial protection needed by a burrow nesting species with a long incubation period.

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