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Ecological and life-history correlates of erythrocyte size and shape in Lepidosauria

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posted on 2024-01-24, 16:34 authored by Zachary Penman, Charles DeemingCharles Deeming, Carl SoulsburyCarl Soulsbury
<p>Blood oxygen-carrying capacity is shaped both by the ambient oxygen availability as well as species-specific oxygen demand. Erythrocytes are a critical part of oxygen transport and both their size and shape can change in relation to species-specific life-history, behavioural or ecological conditions. Here, we test whether components of the environment (altitude), life history (reproductive mode, body temperature) and behaviour (diving, foraging mode) drive erythrocyte size variation in the Lepidosauria (lizards, snakes and rhynchocephalians). We collected data on erythrocyte size (area) and shape (L/W: elongation ratio) from Lepidosauria across the globe (N = 235 species). Our analyses show the importance of oxygen requirements as a driver of erythrocyte size. Smaller erythrocytes were associated with the need for faster delivery (active foragers, high-altitude species, warmer body temperatures), whereas species with greater oxygen demands (diving species, viviparous species) had larger erythrocytes. Erythrocyte size shows considerable cross-species variation, with a range of factors linked to the oxygen delivery requirements being major drivers of these differences. A key future aspect for study would include within-individual plasticity and how changing states, for example, pregnancy, perhaps alter the size and shape of erythrocytes in Lepidosaurs.</p>

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School affiliated with

  • Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Journal of Evolutionary Biology

Volume

35

Issue

5

Pages/Article Number

708–718

Publisher

Wiley

ISSN

1010-061X

eISSN

1420-9101

Date Submitted

2022-04-11

Date Accepted

2022-03-04

Date of First Publication

2022-04-05

Date of Final Publication

2022-05-01

Date Document First Uploaded

2022-04-09

ePrints ID

48932

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