SICB 2017: Can We Measure Heart Rates of Anole Embryos?

image1

Above: Dani Douglas presenting on her research on measuring heart rates of brown anole eggs at the annual Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology Meeting in New Orleans, Louisiana.

Heart rate can tell us a lot about how an animal’s physiology is influenced by environmental conditions. Even embryos can provide valuable heart rate information. Scientists have used the Buddy® system, a digital egg heart rate monitor, to measure heart rate in large eggs, such as those from chickens or iguanas. But can the Buddy® system detect heart rate measurements from much smaller eggs?

Cassie Guiffre, Austin Hulbert, and Dani Douglas, students at Auburn University working with PI Dr. Dan Warner, took heart rate measurements from brown anole (Anolis sagrei) eggs using the Buddy® system.

Compared to a chicken egg, a brown anole egg is tiny – smaller than a quarter. Guiffre, Hulbert, and Douglas kept the anole eggs in an incubator that varied temperature over the course of each day. At different points during the day, they removed eggs from the incubator to measure heart rate with the Buddy®.

The students were elated to find that the Buddy® system could reliably measure heart rate in those small anole eggs. This finding is especially exciting because the Buddy® system is non-invasive, so scientists can measure heart rate over the development of the eggs.

They also found that anole egg heart rates were positively correlated with temperature fluctuation. Anole egg heart rate was not related to the age of the egg.

All research comes with its own set of challenges. When each anole egg is removed from the incubator, its temperature begins to go down immediately. The students needed to measure heart rate quickly to avoid confounding effects of cooling, which can be tricky.

Challenges aside, it is promising thatthe students in the Warner lab ave confirmed that heart rate can be measured in tiny anole eggs.

Previous

SICB 2017: How Do Traits Involved with Reproduction Evolve in Anoles?

Next

SICB 2017: Do Hormone Receptors Explain Differences in Behavior?

2 Comments

  1. Amazing! I would never have thought it could be done…. Congrats! Skip

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén