Maternal provisioning interacts with incubation temperature to affect hatchling mercury exposure in an oviparous reptile

Author:

Johnson Josiah M.12ORCID,Smaga Christopher R.12ORCID,Bock Samantha L.12ORCID,Parrott Benjamin B.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, P.O. Drawer E, Aiken, SC 29802, USA

2. Odum School of Ecology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, USA

Abstract

The thermal environment experienced by developing embryos can influence the utilization of maternally provisioned resources. Despite being particularly consequential for oviparous ectotherms, these dynamics are largely unexplored within ecotoxicological frameworks. Here, we test if incubation temperature interacts with maternally transferred mercury to affect subsequent body burdens and tissue distributions of mercury in hatchling American alligators ( Alligator mississippiensis ). Nine clutches of alligator eggs were collected from a mercury-contaminated reservoir and incubated at either female- or male-promoting temperatures. Total mercury (THg) concentration was measured in egg yolk collected during incubation and in a suite of tissues collected from hatchlings. THg concentrations in residual yolk and blood were higher in hatchlings incubated at cooler, female-promoting temperatures compared to the warmer, male-promoting temperatures. THg concentrations in most tissues were positively correlated with THg concentrations in blood and dermis, and egg yolk THg concentration was the best predictor of THg concentration in many resultant tissues. Our results highlight a hereto unknown role of the developmental environment in mediating tissue specific uptake of contaminants in an oviparous reptile.

Funder

Department of Energy Office of Environmental Management

National Science Foundation

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)

Reference69 articles.

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