ORCID
Dr. Ryan Hill: 0000-0001-8513-6545
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Journal of Experimental Biology
Department
Biological Sciences
ISSN
0022-0949
Volume
207
Issue
13
DOI
10.1242/jeb.00991
First Page
2267
Last Page
2276
Publication Date
1-1-2004
Abstract
Most terrestrial insect embryos support metabolism with oxygen from the environment by diffusion across the eggshell. Because metabolism is more temperature sensitive than diffusion, embryos should be relatively oxygen-limited at high temperatures. We tested whether survival, development time and metabolism of eggs of a moth, Manduca sexta, were sensitive to experimentally imposed variation in atmospheric oxygen availability (5–50 kPa; normoxia at sea level is 21 kPa) across a range of biologically realistic temperatures. Temperature–oxygen interactions were apparent in most experiments. Hypoxia affected survival more strongly at warmer temperatures. Metabolic rates, measured as rates of CO2 emission, were virtually insensitive to hypo- and hyperoxia at 22°C but were strongly influenced at 37°C. Radial profiles of PO2 inside eggs, measured using an oxygen microelectrode, demonstrated that 3-day-old eggs had broad central volumes with PO2 less than 2 kPa, and that higher temperature led to lower PO2. These data indicate that at realistically high temperatures (32–37°C) eggs of M. sexta were oxygen limited, even in normoxia. This result has important implications for insect population ecology and the evolution of eggshell structures, and it suggests a novel hypothesis about insect gigantism during Paleozoic hyperoxia.
Recommended Citation
Woods, H. A.,
&
Hill, R. I.
(2004).
Temperature-dependent oxygen limitation in insect eggs.
Journal of Experimental Biology, 207(13), 2267–2276.
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.00991
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/cop-facarticles/521