Posts Tagged ‘Yolk Sac’

Alligator Eggs

Wednesday, April 11th, 2012


Compared to the simple eggs of fishes and amphibians, which are laid in water and often depend on it to bring fertilizing sperm to them, the reptile egg is a staggering innovation – the product of eons of development which started when the reptiles’ amphibian ancestors first took up internal fertilization. The alligator egg, with its embryo in a halfway stage of development, typifies the complexity of most reptile eggs. The embryo in the center is connected by an umbilical stalk to the primary food supply, the yellow yolk sac, and is encased in the amniotic sac, and envelope filled with fluid which leaves the embryo and cushions it from shock. The amniotic sac and yolk sac, in turn, are surrounded by still another envelope, the allantois, which in the early stages of development grows out from the embryo’s hind-gut. The allantois gets larger as the embryo grows and the yolk shrinks. It serves both as a storage bladder for uric acid, ammonia and other wastes, and as a conveyor for incoming oxygen and outgoing carbon dioxide. Another membrane, the chorion, encloses allantois, amniotic sac, yolk sac and embryo in a tough, resilient envelope closely associated with the eggshell itself. In crocodilians and turtles, the chorion contains egg white, or albumen, which serves to supply the embryo with water and probably some food.

 

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The Miraculous Shelled Egg 2

Friday, August 13th, 2010


All the live-bearing reptiles of modern times are lizards and snakes. Turtles and crocodilians produce only eggs, and so does the tuatara. It is significant that of the three reptiles which venture farthest north, even across the Arctic Circle, two – the European viper and the lizard Lacerta vivipara – bear their young alive. So does the slowworm (Anguis), another venturer into northern regions. The cold ground of those areas, no doubt, is not well suited to incubating eggs. Neither is water, so far as shelled eggs are concerned, which explains why most  reptiles with strongly aquatic habits also bear their young alive.

Many of the live-bearing reptiles, however, belong to groups that have egg-laying members too. The skinks, the lacertas, the boids and the vipers are examples. There are even species that lay eggs in some parts of their ranges but bear live young in other parts. This suggests that their viviparity – as the ability to produce live young is called – is not so formal an undertaking as it is in mammals, and this is true. Some reptiles merely keep the eggs inside the body, for varying periods up to and after hatching time. In others there are extensive, placentalike connections with the tissues of the maternal oviduct. In one type the yolk sac is merely plastered against the wall of the oviduct, and is used primarily for respiration. In a more advanced type the embryonic membranes,the chorion and allantois, interfold with maternal tissues and the embryo not only gets water and nourishment as well as oxygen, but conveniently has its excretory wastes taken away too. None of the live-bearing reptiles has dispensed with a big store of yolk as the main source nourishment for the growing embryo.

All reptiles practice internal fertilization. In all modern forms except the tuatara the male has an organ kept turned outside in, in the base of the tail, and everted through the opening of the cloaca during erection. In the tuatara the transfer of sperm is accomplished by bringing the genital openings into contact, as in birds. This was probably the method used by the ancestral reptiles – it is clear, in any case, that the penis had separate origin in turtles, crocodilians and mammals on the one hand, and in lizards and snakes on the other.

Thus, male lizards and snakes have not just one, but a pair of hollow structures called hemipenes, which make up their copulatory organs. located as they are in the tail just behind the opening of the cloaca, the hemipenes often give the tail of the male a thicker, more gradually tapering contour than that of the female, and in many species the sexes can be distinguished by this difference. A groove that serves as a channel for the sperm extends from the opening of the sperm ducts along the inner wall (which is the outer wall during erection) of each hemipenis, and the surface may be pleated or set with spines that keep it in place in the oviduct of the female during mating. Either one of the hemipenis may be used, but only one, the one nearest to the female, is everted and protruded from the cloaca during erection, which is brought about by a combination of muscular action and distension of the walls with blood.

Among different reptiles fertilization is scheduled differently with respect to the time of nesting. In most species it seems to occur, as might be expected, just before the eggs are laid; but in some the sperm may live on in the reproductive tract of the female and continue to fertilize eggs months or even years after copulation has taken place. The longest known periods of such deferment of fertilization are four years for the diamond back terrapin of the southern United States, and five years in the case of the tropical American cat-eye snake. The green turtle, which evidently mates only in the sea off the nesting beach, often does so after the female has gone ashore and laid her eggs. Since a given female makes her migration to the nesting ground only once in three, or more turtles.

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