4.5 Article

Temperature-dependent oxygen limitation in insect eggs

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 207, Issue 13, Pages 2267-2276

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.00991

Keywords

moth; Manduca sexta; egg; oxygen availability; temperature; metabolism; eggshell; insect gigantism; Paleozoic hyperoxia

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Most terrestrial insect embryos support metabolism with oxygen from the environment by diffusion across the eggshell. Because metabolism is more temperature sensitive than diffusion, embryos should be relatively oxygen-limited at high temperatures. We tested whether survival, development time and metabolism of eggs of a moth, Manduca sexta, were sensitive to experimentally imposed variation in atmospheric oxygen availability (5-50 kPa; normoxia at sea level is 21 kPa) across a range of biologically realistic temperatures. Temperature-oxygen interactions were apparent in most experiments. Hypoxia affected survival more strongly at warmer temperatures. Metabolic rates, measured as rates of CO2 emission, were virtually insensitive to hypo- and hyperoxia at 22degreesC but were strongly influenced at 37degreesC. Radial profiles of P-O2 inside eggs, measured using an oxygen microelectrode, demonstrated that 3-day-old eggs had broad central volumes with P-O2 less than 2 kPa, and that higher temperature led to lower P-O2. These data indicate that at realistically high temperatures (32-37degreesC) eggs of M. sexta were oxygen limited, even in normoxia. This result has important implications for insect population ecology and the evolution of eggshell structures, and it suggests a novel hypothesis about insect gigantism during Paleozoic hyperoxia.

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