INVESTIGADORES
GROSSO Jimena Renee
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
A survey of morphological and heterochronical variations during early ontogeny in six families of Leptodactyliformes (Anura: Hyloides)
Autor/es:
GROSSO, JIMENA RENEÉ; VERA CANDIOTI, MARÍA FLORENCIA; BARRASO, DIEGO; NOGUEIRA COSTA, PAULO; BARRIONUEVO, SEBASTIÁN; NATALE, GUILLERMO; BALDO, DIEGO
Lugar:
Washington
Reunión:
Congreso; International Congress of Vertebrate Morphology; 2016
Institución organizadora:
International Society of Vertebrate Morphology (ISVM)
Resumen:
The early ontogeny in anurans includes the occurrence of transient,exclusively embryonic structures, plus the initial stages of development of larval features. We compared developmental series of 13 species belonging to six families of the clade Leptodactyliformes, in order to record morphological and heterochronical changes among them.Tailbud embryos of Telmatobius oxycephalus (Telmatobiidae), Limnomedusa macroglossa (Alsodidae), and ceratophryid Ceratophrys cranwelli, C. ornata, and Chacophrys pierotti are well-pigmented and have no dorsalcurvature. Conversely, Batrachyla leptopus (Batrachylidae) and six species of Odontophrynidae have pigmented but kyphotic embryos. Embryos of Cycloramphus brasiliensis (Cycloramphidae) lack pigmentation completely. Three different adhesive gland types occur: type A in Ceratophryidae and L. macroglossa, type C in Odontophrynidae and B. leptopus, and type B in T. oxycephalus, this latter being typical of unrelated bufonids. The adhesive glands are absent in C. brasiliensis. Regarding gills, two pairs occur in Odontophrynidae, L. macroglossa, and C. brasiliensis and a third pair develops in Ceratophryidae, T. oxycephalus, and B. leptopus, in this latter case poorly developed.Ontogeny of the oral disc is similar in all species with labial tooth row formula 2/3, whereas Ceratophrys spp. differ in development of supernumerary tooth rows. Some patterns will likely be proven diagnostic of some clades (e.g., type B adhesive glands in Telmatobius, three gill pairs in ceratophryids). On the other hand, the unusual set of features of the exotrophic, semiterrestrial C. brasiliensis specimens (large yolk provision, and lack of pigmentation and of adhesive glands) are typical of endotrophic embryos, and possibly conserved within the genus.