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Turning crocodilian hearts into bird hearts: growth rates are similar for alligators with and without right-to-left cardiac shunt

John Eme, University of California - Irvine
June Gwalthney, University of California - Irvine
Tomasz Owerkowicz, University of California - Irvine
Jason M. Blank, California Polytechnic State University - San Luis Obispo
James W. Hicks, University of California - Irvine

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Copyright © 2010 by the authors. Published by Company of Biologists. The definitive version is available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jeb.042051

Abstract

The functional and possible adaptive significance of non-avian reptiles’ dual aortic arch system and the ability of all non-avian reptiles to perform central vascular cardiac shunts have been of great interest to comparative physiologists. The unique cardiac anatomy of crocodilians – a four-chambered heart with the dual aortic arch system – allows for only right-to-left (R–L; pulmonary bypass) cardiac shunt and for surgical elimination of this shunt. Surgical removal of the R–L shunt, by occluding the left aorta (LAo) upstream and downstream of the foramen of Panizza, results in a crocodilian with an obligatory, avian/mammalian central circulation. In this study, R–L cardiac shunt was eliminated in age-matched, female American alligators (Alligator mississippiensis; 5–7 months of age). We tested the hypothesis that surgical elimination of R–L cardiac shunt would impair growth (a readily measured proxy for fitness) compared with sham-operated, age-matched controls, especially in animals subjected to exhaustive exercise. While regular exercise caused a decrease in size (snout-to-vent length, head length and body mass), elimination of the capacity for R–L cardiac shunt did not greatly reduce animal growth, despite a chronic ventricular enlargement in surgically altered juvenile alligators. We speculate that, despite being slightly smaller, alligators with an occluded LAo would have reached sexual maturity in the same breeding season as control alligators. This study suggests that crocodilian R–L cardiac shunt does not provide an adaptive advantage for juvenile alligator growth and supports the logic that cardiac shunts persist in crocodilians because they have not been selected against.

Suggested Citation

John Eme, June Gwalthney, Tomasz Owerkowicz, Jason M. Blank, and James W. Hicks. "Turning crocodilian hearts into bird hearts: growth rates are similar for alligators with and without right-to-left cardiac shunt" The Journal of Experimental Biology 213.15 (2010): 2673-2680.
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/jmblank/10

Eme2010_Gator_shunt_growth_sup1.pdf (155 kB)
Shunt Growth Supplement 1

Eme2010_Gator_shunt_growth_sup2.pdf (68 kB)
Shunt Growth Supplement 2



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