INVESTIGADORES
FERNANDEZ mariela soledad
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
HAVE THE ONTOGENETIC CHANGES DURING INCUBATION INTERFERE WITH DINOSAUR INTERPRETATION OF INCUBATION MODE?
Autor/es:
FERNÁNDEZ, MARIELA S.; PIAZZA, MILA V.; SIMONCINI, MELINA S.
Lugar:
Salta
Reunión:
Congreso; Reunión de comunicaciones de la Asociacion Paleontologica Argentina; 2022
Resumen:
Dinosaurs are oviparous reptiles that belong to Archosauria and whose closest modern relatives are crocodiles and birds. This is why, to shed light on the study of dinosaur reproduction, we conducted a test with the species Caiman latirostris, a living archosaur. The aim of this study focusses on the embryos’ effect on the eggshells of Caiman latirostris eggs during incubation. A total of 30 eggs from four nests including both embryonated and non-embryonated eggs were artificially incubated under the same conditions (incubation medium and temperature) to observe changes in eggshell structure throughout embryonic development. We found significant differences between embryonated and non-embryonated eggs. In the embryonated eggshells we observed that the continuous calcium layer, also known as the parameter "shell thickness without ornamentation",became thinner, while at the same time we recorded an increase in the porosity of the eggshells both in the polar and equatorial regions. These changes could explain the variability recorded in fossil deposits with broods, where shells of the same oospecies were found at different levels and with differences in porosity and thickness. The results of this study will contribute to the methodology behind the inference of nesting environment and nesting strategies (buried, semi-buried or exposed) for fossil eggs, which typically utilizes calculations of water vapor conductance. Additionally, our findings will allow future researchers to redefine oospecies boundaries, since both shell thickness and conductance change during incubation.