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Investigations on the toxin of Taricha granulosa

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Investigations on the toxin of Taricha granulosa
Names Brodie, Edmund D. (creator)
Storm, Robert M. (advisor)
Date Issued 1966-11-21 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1967
Abstract There are essentially no publications dealing with the skin toxin
of Taricha granulosa. This study has undertaken investigations with
this toxin in an attempt to determine its potency and its effect on the
newt's potential predators.
Test solutions were made by macerating a known volume of newt
skin in a known volume of saline solution. A known volume of this
mixture was injected into a test animal to check the animal's susceptibility
to the toxin. The skin solution was found to be toxic when used
in oral, subcutaneous, and intraperitoneal injections. Tests were
also made by feeding, both voluntary and by force, portions or entire
newts to potential predators.
It was found that one mouse unit (dose, injected intraperitoneally
needed to kill a 21 gr. white mouse in ten minutes) equaled 0.0002 cc.
of back skin from an adult terrestrial Taricha granulosa.
Forty-two vertebrate taxa (3 fish, 6 amphibians, 14 reptiles,
5 birds, and 14 mammals) were tested either with injections or by feeding; all except Thamnophis sp. were conclusively proven to be
susceptible to the newt skin toxin. Thamnophis sp. were killed by
very large injections but survived after eating adult newts.
A toxin was also found to be present in ovarian eggs, oviducal
eggs, and the blood of adult males (females were not tested). Very
little or no toxin is present in larvae.
Terrestrial newts appear to be more toxic than aquatic newts
and back skin appears to be more toxic than ventral skin.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Salamanders
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/47407

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