Live-bearing manta ray: How the embryo acquires oxygen without placenta and umbilical cord

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Abstract

We conducted an ultrasonographic experiment on a pregnant manta ray, Manta alfredi (Chondrichthyes, Batoidea). This study showed how the embryo of the live-bearing elasmobranchs respires in the body of the female. In the embryonic stage, the manta ray embryo takes in uterine fluid by buccal-pumping. After birth, the manta ray shifts its respiratory mode from buccalpumping to ram-ventilation. The rapid reduction of the spiracle size in the young manta ray may reflect this shift of respiratory mode. Unlike mammals or some carcharhinid sharks that acquire oxygen through a placenta and umbilical cord, the manta ray embryo does not have a direct connection with the mother. Thus, the manta ray embryo obtains oxygen by buccal-pumping of the uterine fluid, in the same way that the embryos of egg-laying species obtain oxygen from the water in the egg case. This finding extends our understanding of the diversity of embryonic respiratory systems in live-bearing vertebrates. © 2011 The Royal Society.

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Tomita, T., Toda, M., Ueda, K., Uchida, S., & Nakaya, K. (2012). Live-bearing manta ray: How the embryo acquires oxygen without placenta and umbilical cord. Biology Letters, 8(5), 721–724. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2012.0288

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