Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2064613 Toxicon 2014 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Poison replacement in toad parotoid after mechanical compression was studied.•The poison recovery of these unknown glands is linked to toad passive defense.•Toad parotoids are unique, constituting an efficient storage organ of poison.•Glands forming the parotoids are independently triggered, depending on bite position.•The predator itself, at the moment of a bite, triggers shoots of poison inside its mouth.

Toads have a pair of parotoid macroglands behind the eyes that secrete poison used in passive defence against predators. These macroglands are composed of juxtaposed alveoli, each one bearing a syncytial gland, all connected to the exterior by ducts. When the parotoids are bitten, the poison is expelled on the predator oral mucosa in the form of jets, causing several pharmacological actions. After poison release, the empty secretory syncytia immediately collapse in the interior of their respective alveoli and gradually start refilling. After parotoid manual compression, simulating a predator's bite, we studied, by means of morphological methods, the replacement of the poison inside the alveoli. The results showed that after compression, a considerable number of alveoli remained intact. In the alveoli that were effectively affected the recovery occurs in different levels, from total to punctual and often restrict to some areas of the syncytia. The severely affected alveoli seem not recover their original functional state. The fact that only a part of the parotoid alveoli is compressed during an attack seems to be crucial for toad survival, since the amphibian, after being bitten by a predator, do not lose all its poison stock, remaining protected in case of new attacks.

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