Journal article

The developing renal, reproductive, and respiratory systems of the African elephant suggest an aquatic ancestry

AP Gaeth, RV Short, MB Renfree

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | NATL ACAD SCIENCES | Published : 1999

Abstract

The early embryology of the elephant has never been studied before. We have obtained a rare series of African elephant (Loxodonta africana) embryos and fetuses ranging in weight from 0.04 to 18.5 g, estimated gestational ages 58-166 days (duration of gestation is ≃660 days). Nephrostomes, a feature of aquatic vertebrates, were found in the mesonephric kidneys at all stages of development whereas they have never been recorded in the mesonephric kidneys of other viviparous mammals. The trunk was well developed even in the earliest fetus. The testes were intra-abdominal, and there was no evidence of a gubernaculum, pampiniform plexus, processus vaginalis, or a scrotum, confirming that the eleph..

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