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American Zoologist 1992 32(2):294-302; doi:10.1093/icb/32.2.294
© 1992 by The Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology
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Ion and Osmoregulation in Prenatal Elasmobranchs: Evolutionary Implications1

GREGG A. KORMANIK
Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Asheville Asheville, North Carolina 28804 The Mount Desert Island Biological Laboratory Salsbury Cove, Maine 04672

The elasmobranchs represent a fascinating series of experiments in the evolution of maternal support for developing embryos. In oviparous species, eggs are enclosed in a tough, fibrous capsule. The capsule is very permeable and the embryonic tissues are bathed in a solution ionically similar to sea water within hours of oviposition. In the primitively viviparous species Squalus acanthias, early embryos in egg capsules are retained in utero and are bathed in a solution similar to maternal plasma. Several months into the 22 month gestation period the embryos are capable of independent iono- and osmoregulation in a uterine solution that resembles sea water. Embryos of more advanced viviparous species develop in a solution that is similar to maternal plasma. Iono- and osmoregulation by these embryos would appear to beminimal. It is clear that in the oviparous elasmobranchs, the ability of the egg/embryo to maintain salts and urea at appropriate levels is present at the earliest stage of development. The ability of prenatal elasmobranch embryos to iono- and osmoregulate would allow the evolution ofa diverse array of reproductive strategies in the elasmobranchs.


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