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Counterbalancing effects of maternal mercury exposure during different stages of early ontogeny in American toads
Authors:Bergeron Christine M  Hopkins William A  Bodinof Catherine M  Budischak Sarah A  Wada Haruka  Unrine Jason M
Affiliation:
  • a Wildlife Ecotoxicology and Physiological Ecology Program, Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA 24061, USA
  • b Department of Plant and Soil Sciences and The Tracy Farmer Institute for Sustainability and the Environment, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40546, USA
  • Abstract:Maternal transfer of environmental contaminants is a disadvantageous parental effect which can have long-lasting implications for offspring fitness. We investigated the effects of mercury (Hg) on the reproductive success of female amphibians and the subsequent effects of maternal transfer on the development of their offspring. American toads (Bufo americanus) maternally transferred Hg to their eggs, and there was a negative relationship between Hg concentrations and the percentage of viable hatchlings produced in clutches. However, when we continued to monitor larvae that successfully hatched, we found 21% greater metamorphic success in larvae from Hg-exposed mothers compared to reference larvae. The negative effect in the embryonic stage and positive effect in the larval stage counterbalanced one another, ultimately resulting in no difference in predicted terrestrial recruitment, regardless of maternal Hg exposure. Our findings demonstrate that maternal effects on survival manifesting at different stages in ontogeny have the potential to produce complicated outcomes.
    Keywords:Maternal effects   Amphibian   Mercury   Maternal transfer
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