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Carotenoid discrimination by the avian embryo: a lesson from wild birds

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/S1096-4959(00)00369-9

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carotenoids; lutein; beta-carotene; coot; moorhen; gull; egg yolk; tissues; chick

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The concentrations (mug/g wet yolk) of total carotenoids in eggs of the common moorhen (Gallinula chloropus), American coot (Fulica americana) and lesser black-backed gull (Larus fuscus), collected in the wild, were 47.5, 131.0 and 71.6, respectively. In contrast to data for eggs of the domestic chicken, beta -carotene was a significant component in the yolks of these three wild species, forming 25-29% by wt, of the total carotenoids present. The concentration of total carotenoids in the livers of the newly-hatched chicks was 5-10 times higher than in the other tissues and beta -carotene was again a major component, forming 37-58% of the hepatic carotenoids. In the newly-hatched gull, the proportions of both lutein and zeaxanthin were very low in the liver but high in the heart and muscle when compared with the yolk. By contrast canthaxanthin, echinenone and beta -carotene were very minor constituents of heart and muscle when compared with their proportions in the yolk of the gull. The proportions of lutein and zeaxanthin in the liver of the newly-hatched coot and moorhen were also far lower than in the yolk whereas the liver was relatively enriched with beta -cryptoxanthin, beta -carotene and (in the moorhen) echinenone. The results indicate that avian embryos discriminate between different carotenoids during their distribution from the yolk to the various tissues. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Inc. All rights reserved.

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