Abstract
Stimulating precocious metamorphosis in anuran larvae is an important pedagogical tool for understanding vertebrate development. However, historically, artificially provoking metamorphosis by immersing tadpoles in exogenous inducing agents (e.g., thyroxine, and iodine) compromises the longevity of the experimental animals, resulting in up to 100% mortality within a week. In our undergraduate teaching lab, we house our experimental tadpoles in circular glass dishes having a surface area of 182 cm2. Over the past four academic years this lab was performed, we observed 100% mortality of experimental animals within 10, 12, or 15 days when treated with 10-5 M, 10-6 M, or 10-7 M thyroxine, respectively. Here, we investigated whether increasing the surface area to 413 cm2 using square glass dishes would reduce the mortality of the treated animals. Omnibus Kaplan-Meier survival analysis demonstrates a statistically significant decrease in mortality in tadpoles reared in the larger square dishes compared to those housed in the smaller round dishes (
Author Contributions
Copyright© 2024
K. Portell Ashley, et al.
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
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Introduction
Anuran larvae (i.e., tadpoles) have been a mainstay of vertebrate developmental biology studies on metamorphosis since the early 20th century. A pollywog’s small size and robust response to chemically induced metamorphosis make these animals ideal for the undergraduate teaching lab Thyroxine (T4) and tri-iodothyronine (T3) are hormones produced by the thyroid gland that regulate metabolic rate, growth, and development of various organs Immersion of American bullfrog tadpoles,
Results
In our undergraduate teaching lab, we have historically used round dishes having a surface area of 182.4 cm2 to house tadpoles and have successfully observed metamorphosis with the exogenous application of thyroxine and iodine (Henderson, J.O. unpublished data). However, we have consistently observed that the tadpoles tend to be aggressive towards each other, especially large ones to smaller ones (data not shown). We hypothesized that housing the tadpoles in larger square dishes with a surface area of 413 cm2 would give each tadpole more space, decreasing aggression and therefore increase overall survivability during the experimental timeframe. We ran two independent experiments using square dishes and inducing metamorphosis as described in We then compared the survival rate of our tadpoles (N = 80) from duplicate experiments using square dishes, performed Fall 2022, with historical survival data collected over four semesters in the same teaching lab space (N = 160 tadpoles; Spring 2014, 2016, 2018, and 2022) using SPSS. An omnibus Kaplan-Meier survival analysis demonstrated a statistically significant decrease in the mortality of the group of tadpoles reared in large dishes compared to those experimented on in small dishes ( In contrast, tadpoles exposed to thyroxine of any concentration, even for as little as one week, died just as quickly when housed in large dishes as when maintained in small dishes ( In conclusion, our results reveal that increased surface area has a substantial positive impact on the survival rate of tadpoles maintained in pond water and immersed in iodine, a mild inducer of precocious metamorphosis, in a teaching lab setting. However, increased surface area is unable to counteract the physiological stress and increased mortality induced by immersion in thyroxine at the concentrations used in this study. Therefore, these findings have positive implications for the optimization of environmental conditions for housing tadpoles in the teaching lab to enhance the educational experience and success of similar experiments provoking precocious metamorphosis in