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Reply | Forward Message #1432 of 1448 |
Re: [Palaeoology] Air chambers

Croc hatchling is a miniature replica, almost in all respects, of the adult.
It breaths, and may even bite (snap at) immediately after hatchling. Sometimes, before completely emerging out of the egg, the hatchling may remain still with just its snout-tip piercedout of the shell, while still burried under sand.
Thanks.
Regards.

Dr. Lala A. K. Singh, Prakruti Bhavan, Neelakantha Nagar Bhubaneswar, Orissa, PIN: 751012, INDIA

--- On Wed, 29/10/08, strangetruther@... <strangetruther@...> wrote:
From: strangetruther@... <strangetruther@...>
Subject: Re: [Palaeoology] Air chambers
To: Palaeoology@...
Date: Wednesday, 29 October, 2008, 5:49 PM

Thanks Charles. That's interesting. So crocs don't need to poke their noses into an airspace while still in the egg. Does this mean they remove the fluid from their lungs and start to breath when they hatch in the same way mammals do at birth?

Cheers,

JJ

--- On Tue, 10/28/08, Charles Deeming <charlie@deemingdc. freeserve. co.uk> wrote:

> From: Charles Deeming <charlie@deemingdc. freeserve. co.uk>
> Subject: Re: [Palaeoology] Air chambers
> To: Palaeoology@ yahoogroups. co.uk
> Date: Tuesday, October 28, 2008, 10:03 AM
> No soft-shelled eggs collapse if they lose weight.
>
> Under normal incubation conditions no reptile egg forms an
> air space - pliable-shelled turtle eggs swell (as do
> parchment-shelled lizard and snake eggs) and hard-shelled
> turtle and croc eggs don't lose water.
>
> Charles
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: strangetruther@ yahoo.com
> To: Palaeoology@ yahoogroups. co.uk
> Sent: Friday, October 24, 2008 5:35 PM
> Subject: [Palaeoology] Air chambers
>
>
> Can anyone confirm that soft-shelled eggs don’t develop
> air-chambers? Hard to see how they could.
>
> Presumably crocs develop air-chambers. Do all
> hard-shelled eggs?
>
> Thanks for any views.
>
> Cordially,
>
> John V. Jackson



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Thu Oct 30, 2008 10:38 am

laksingh2005
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Message #1432 of 1448 |
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Anybody interested in the papers below? Recognition of vertebrate egg abnormalities in the Upper Cretaceous fossil record Frankie D. Jackson*, James G. Schmitt...
cogombra
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Oct 14, 2008
1:14 pm

Yes! Best regards, Alvaro ... From: cogombra To: Palaeoology@... Sent: Tuesday, 14 October, 2008 14:42 Subject: [Palaeoology] New Papers Anybody...
Alvaro Mones
alvaromones
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Oct 14, 2008
1:31 pm

Can anyone confirm that soft-shelled eggs don’t develop air-chambers? Hard to see how they could. Presumably crocs develop air-chambers. Do all...
strangetruther@...
strangetruther
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Oct 27, 2008
10:27 am

No soft-shelled eggs collapse if they lose weight. Under normal incubation conditions no reptile egg forms an air space - pliable-shelled turtle eggs swell (as...
Charles Deeming
charles_deeming
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Oct 28, 2008
10:48 am

Only if the croc egg desiccates, towards the end of incubation (before hatching time) we may notice the leathery membrane of the egg depress-in (like vacum)....
Lala A.K. Singh
laksingh2005
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Oct 29, 2008
9:16 pm

Fascinating - thatnks too, Lala. So perhaps that's why the croc hard shell layer seems (as far as I can tell - may be wrong) to fall off more readily than...
strangetruther@...
strangetruther
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Oct 30, 2008
10:32 am

Thanks Charles. That's interesting. So crocs don't need to poke their noses into an airspace while still in the egg. Does this mean they remove the fluid...
strangetruther@...
strangetruther
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Oct 29, 2008
9:16 pm

Croc hatchling is a miniature replica, almost in all respects, of the adult.. It breaths, and may even bite (snap at) immediately after hatchling. Sometimes,...
Lala A.K. Singh
laksingh2005
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Oct 30, 2008
11:09 am
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