Artificial Reproduction and Embryogeny of the Tiger Frog Hoplobatrachus occipitalis (Gu¨nther 1858)
Loading...
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
The objective of this study was to investigate the
embryonic development of the frog Hoplobatrachus
occipitalis after their artificial reproduction with the
Ovaprim, a combination of gonadotropin releasing hormone
analogue and dopamine antagonist domperidone.
Male and female H. occipitalis were collected from the
wild and were intramuscularly injected with Ovaprim at
doses of 6 lL/g and 8 lL/g body weight, respectively. The
eggs were laid 6 h after hormone injection. The numbers of
eggs laid by each female frog were 1726 ± 5.4 (SD) with
94.4% and 88.2% mean fecundity and hatching rate,
respectively. The diameter of the eggs at laying was
2.73 ± 0.33 mm while it was 5.04 ± 0.05 mm just before
hatching. The stages of embryonic development starting
from fertilization to tadpoles’ formation took 27 h to
complete at 26.4 ± 0.3 C. The average height of the
tadpoles after hatching was 5.1 mm. Circular tadpole
movement in the chorion with an irregular respiratory
movement was observed at 21 h after egg-laying. In summary,
the study shows that H. occipitalis could reproduce
in controlled environment by hormonal induction; the
reproductive structures have no significant effect on egglaying;
and the embryonic development time of H. occipitalis
differs from that other Anuran species.
