Effect Of Prudhoe Bay Crude Oil On Hatching Success And Associated Changes In The Pipping Muscle (ilusculus Complexus) In Embryos Of Domestic Chickens (gallus Gallus)
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Date
1992-05-26Author
Lusimbo, W S
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
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Fertile White Leghorn chicken eggs were exposed to 0,1,2,4,6,8, and 16 ~L of Prudhoe Bay Crude oil (PBCO) on day 9 of incubation. The effects of oil on percentage pipping, percentage hatchability, body weight gains post hatching, serum creatine kinase and pathological changes in the pipping (hatching) muscle (musculus complexus), liver, bursa of Fabricius and other organ systems were assessed during the hatching period in embryos that had survived acute toxicity and were alive on day 18 of incubation. Oil treatment greatly reduced hatchability and percentage plpplng (Chi-square: p=O.OOOl).
Severe edema and hemorrhage of the pipping muscle, multi focal subcapsular hepatic necrosis, lymphoid atrophy in the bursa of Fabricius with infiltration,by heterophils and occasional dorsocaudal subcutaneous edema were observed in oil exposed embryos.
Pipping muscle wet weight was greater in oil-exposed embryos (t test: p =0.001). Body weight gain post-hatching was significantly reduced in embryos exposed to 4 uL of PBCO (ANOVA: p<0.05). Serum creatine kinase (CK) levels were elevated only at the time of
hatching In the oil-exposed embryos (t test: p = 0.047).
Dysfunction of the pipping muscle in oil-exposed ,embryos may account for reduced pipping rates and hatchability.
Citation
Masters Of Veterinary Science, Unversity Of Nairobi,1992Publisher
University of Nairobi College Of Graduate Studies And Research Saskatoon