Summary
Flexible-shelled eggs of common snapping turtles were incubated on wet and dry substrates. More than 70% of the waste nitrogen accumulating in eggs on both substrates was in the form of urea, and less than 25% was in the form of ammonia. Low levels of soluble urate were detected in eggs late in incubation, but insoluble urate was never present. Accumulation of ammonia and soluble urate was unaffected by the hydration of the environment, but more urea accumulated late in incubation in eggs on the wet substrate than in those on the dry substrate. Thus, embryos are ureotelic throughout development, and the pattern of accumulation of the primary nitrogenous waste is influenced by hydration of the environment.
- © 1984 by Company of Biologists