4.4 Article

Plasticity of Hatching in Amphibians: Evolution, Trade-Offs, Cues and Mechanisms

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INTEGRATIVE AND COMPARATIVE BIOLOGY
卷 51, 期 1, 页码 111-127

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OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/icb/icr046

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  1. Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology and all its divisions
  2. National Science Foundation [IOS-1036933, HRD-0820175, DEB-0716923, IBN-0234439]
  3. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
  4. Boston University

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Many species of frogs and salamanders, in at least 12 families, alter their timing of hatching in response to conditions affecting mortality of eggs or larvae. Some terrestrially laid or stranded embryos wait to hatch until they are submerged in water. Some embryos laid above water accelerate hatching if the eggs are dehydrating; others hatch early if flooded. Embryos can hatch early in response to predators and pathogens of eggs or delay hatching in response to predators of larvae; some species do both. The phylogenetic pattern of environmentally cued hatching suggests that similar responses have evolved convergently in multiple amphibian lineages. The use of similar cues, including hypoxia and physical disturbance, in multiple contexts suggests potential shared mechanisms underlying the capacity of embryos to respond to environmental conditions. Shifts in the timing of hatching often have clear benefits, but we know less about the trade-offs that favor plasticity, the mechanisms that enable it, and its evolutionary history. Some potentially important types of cued hatching, such as those involving embryo-parent interactions, are relatively unexplored. I discuss promising directions for research and the opportunities that the hatching of amphibians offers for integrative studies of the mechanisms, ecology and evolution of a critical transition between life-history stages.

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