2022
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.8570
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Reproductive colonization of land by frogs: Embryos and larvae excrete urea to avoid ammonia toxicity

Abstract: Vertebrate colonization of land has occurred multiple times, including over 50 origins of terrestrial eggs in frogs. Some environmental factors and phenotypic responses that facilitated these transitions are known, but responses to water constraints and risk of ammonia toxicity during early development are poorly understood. We tested if ammonia accumulation and dehydration risk induce a shift from ammonia to urea excretion during early stages of four anurans, from three origins of terrestrial development. We … Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
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“…2017 ; Tippett and Warkentin 2017 ) and also evident in our baseline hatching rates (see Table 1 ). The mechanism underlying this response is unknown but might involve increased osmolality of perivitelline and body fluids or the increased concentration of specific molecules, such as ammonia ( Méndez-Narvaez and Warkentin 2022 ). In addition, these embryos are known to combine information across cue properties and across sensory modalities for their hatching decisions ( Warkentin and Caldwell 2009 ; Güell and Warkentin 2018 ; Jung et al.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2017 ; Tippett and Warkentin 2017 ) and also evident in our baseline hatching rates (see Table 1 ). The mechanism underlying this response is unknown but might involve increased osmolality of perivitelline and body fluids or the increased concentration of specific molecules, such as ammonia ( Méndez-Narvaez and Warkentin 2022 ). In addition, these embryos are known to combine information across cue properties and across sensory modalities for their hatching decisions ( Warkentin and Caldwell 2009 ; Güell and Warkentin 2018 ; Jung et al.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%