Abstract

1. The purpose of this work was to measure changes in oxygen pressure in the air cell and under the eggshell (P A O 2 ) of pre-pipping goose eggs before and after drilling holes into the air cell. 2. Drilling a 0 6 mm2 (diameter of 0 9 mm) hole into the air cell caused an increase in air cell P A O 2 of about 10 Torr. The rate of increase attenuated as hole area increased and reached about 21 Torr when the drilled area was 8 5 mm2. 3. The P A O 2 of intact eggs was not equally distributed under the shell. It was high in the air cell area (108 Torr) and decreased towards the pointed end (86 Torr). 4. The increase in P A O 2 after drilling a 4 9 mm2 hole was high in the air cell (18 Torr) and decreased with distance, becoming non-significant at the pointed end. The significant increase in P A O 2 after drilling was limited to a distance of up to 38 mm along the shell from the edge of the air cell. This indicates that lateral diffusion in the shell membranes under the shell is limited. 5. Drilling a hole of 3 5 to 4 9 mm2 was enough to increase air cell P A O 2 in most of the eggs above the critical value of 100 Torr for hatching success. The increase in P A O 2 was limited to about half the area of the shell and the average increase in P A O 2 was 6 3 Torr (equivalent to a 0 9% increase in ambient O 2 ). However, the blood perfusing chorioallantoic areas further away from the air cell edge may not be fully saturated with O 2 and may not be sufficient to compensate fully for the low O 2 availability caused by low eggshell conductance.

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