by Jim Shelton, Yale
News, May 19, 2015
The ancestral
snakes in the grass actually lived in the forest, according to the most
detailed look yet at the iconic reptiles.
A comprehensive
analysis by Yale University paleontologists reveals new
insights into the origin and early history of snakes. For one thing, they kept
late hours; for another, they also kept their hind legs.
“We generated
the first comprehensive reconstruction of what the ancestral snake was like,”
said Allison Hsiang, lead author the study published online May 19 in the
journal BMC Evolutionary Biology. Hsiang is a postdoctoral researcher in Yale’s
Department of Geology and Geophysics.
“We infer that
the most recent common ancestor of all snakes was a nocturnal, stealth-hunting
predator targeting relatively large prey, and most likely would have lived in
forested ecosystems in the Southern Hemisphere,” Hsiang said.
Snakes have
always captured the imagination of humans. Their long and sinuous body,
fearsome reputation, and great diversity — with more than 3,400 living species
— make them one of the most recognizable groups of living vertebrate animals.
Yet little has been known about how, where, and when modern snakes emerged.
The Yale team
analyzed snake genomes, modern snake anatomy, and new information from the
fossil record to find answers. In doing so, the researchers generated a family
tree for both living and extinct snakes, illuminating major evolutionary
patterns that have played out across snake evolutionary history.
“Our analyses
suggest that the most recent common ancestor of all living snakes would have
already lost its forelimbs, but would still have had tiny hind limbs, with
complete ankles and toes. It would have first evolved on land, instead of in
the sea,” said co-author Daniel Field, a Yale Ph.D. candidate. “Both of those
insights resolve longstanding debates on the origin of snakes.”
The researchers
said ancestral snakes were non-constricting, wide-ranging foragers that seized
their prey with needle-like hooked teeth and swallowed them whole. They
originated about 128.5 million years ago, during the middle Early Cretaceous
period.
“Primate
brains, including those of humans, are hard-wired to attend to serpents, and
with good reason,” said Jacques Gauthier, senior author of the study, a Yale
professor of geology and geophysics, and curator of fossil vertebrates at the
Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History. “Our natural and adaptive attention to
snakes makes the question of their evolutionary origin especially intriguing.”
Support for the
research came from the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, the Smithsonian
Institution, and the Canadian Natural Sciences and Engineering Research
Council.
Additional
authors of the study are Timothy Webster, Adam Behlke, Matthew Davis, and
Rachel Racicot, all of Yale.
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