Abstract

Terrestrial eggs have evolved repeatedly in tropical anurans exposing embryos to the new threat of dehydration. Red-eyed treefrogs, Agalychnis callidryas, lay eggs on plants over water. Maternally provided water allows shaded eggs in humid sites to develop to hatching without rainfall, but unshaded eggs and those in less humid sites can die from dehydration. Hatching responses of amphibian eggs to dry conditions are known from two lineages with independent origins of terrestrial eggs. Here, we experimentally tested for dehydration-induced early hatching in another lineage (Agalychnis callidryas, Phyllomedusidae), representing a third independent origin of terrestrial eggs. We also investigated how dehydration affected egg and clutch structure, and egg mortality. We collected clutches from a pond in Gamboa, Panama, and randomly allocated them to wet or dry treatments at age 1 day. Embryos hatched earlier from dry clutches than from wet clutches, accelerating hatching by ∼11%. Clutch thickness and egg diameter were affected by dehydration, diverging between treatments over time. Meanwhile, mortality in dry clutches was six-fold higher than in control clutches. With this study, early hatching responses to escape mortality from egg dehydration are now known from three anuran lineages with independent origins of terrestrial eggs, suggesting they may be widespread. Further studies are needed to understand how terrestrial amphibian eggs can respond to, or will be affected by, rapid changes in climate over the next decades.

Highlights

  • Terrestrial eggs have evolved repeatedly in many species of teleost fishes and amphibians (Martin & Carter, 2013)

  • We studied them at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Gamboa, Panama

  • The acceleration in hatching timing (11%) was less than that reported for other frogs (Dendrosophus ebraccatus: 17%, Touchon & Warkentin, 2010; Hyalinobatrachium fleishmanni: 59%, Delia, Ramírez-Bautista & Summers, 2014)

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Summary

Introduction

Terrestrial eggs have evolved repeatedly in many species of teleost fishes and amphibians (Martin & Carter, 2013). In tropical anurans, Gomez-Mestre, Pyron & Wiens (2012) found 48 independent origins of terrestrial reproduction. The evolution of terrestrial breeding may be driven by the risk of aquatic predation in early life stages (Duellman & Trueb, 1986; Touchon, 2012). Terrestrial eggs are exposed to different threats than those affecting aquatic eggs, including terrestrial predators (Warkentin, 1995; Warkentin, 2000), pathogens (Warkentin, Currie & Rehner, 2001), and. The risk of egg dehydration most strongly affects species without parental care, and this threat could be exacerbated by climate change (Donnelly & Crump, 1998). It is important to understand the potential responses of vulnerable life stages to such climate variations

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