From common garden snakes to
rattlesnakes to king cobras, BYU biologist said all snakes have the same common
ancestor: a blind grandpa.
The new study suggested that
the common ancestor was a small, blind underground species
called scolecophidia that mostly fed on termites and ant larva.
The data comes from a
seven-year study on the “Deep Scaly” branch of the National Science
Foundation-funded “Assembling the Tree of Life” project, which attempted
to reconstruct the evolutionary origins of the planet’s living creatures.
The study used the largest
molecular data set ever assembled and was conducted by biologists at
San Diego State University, Brigham Young University, Stony Brook University,
University of Texas-Austin, Yale and the Field Museum of Natural
History. The data included sequences from 44 genes, resolved for 161
species representing all recognized families and major groups of living snakes
and lizards.
Jack W. Sites, Jr., BYU
biology professor, co-authored the study. Sites was invited to join the
“Deep Scaly” team that began work in 2004 to resolve controversies in the
branch of the tree dealing with snakes and lizards. After seven years of
research, his team has met every goal in their original grant-winning proposal.
“It really was surprising to
find that the root of most modern snakes goes back to that one group,” Sites
said. “Whether they live in trees or the ocean, whether they are constrictors
or venomous snakes, whether they are 25-inch garter snakes or 25-foot
anacondas, they all have the same small, semi-blind ancestor.”
The thousands of species of
snakes today have all adapted from the ancient scolecophidians. The ancestor
was small with a rounded head, small eyes and a small mouth. The jaw
flexibility that many snakes possess today that allows them to swallow their
prey is apparently an adaptive trait, as scolecophidians did not have
the capability to do so.
John J. Wiens, a professor of
ecology and evolution at Stony Brook University, was the lead author on the
study.
“No matter where they live,
snakes have an elongate body and a relatively short tail, and outside of
snakes, this body shape is only found in lizards that live underground,” Wiens
said in a press release. “Snakes have kept this same basic body shape as they
have evolved to invade nearly every habitat on the planet.”
The professors were aided
by 25 undergraduate students and multiple graduate and post-doctoral
researchers, including Bryce Noonan from Ole Miss.
“This was the last stepping
stone in my post-doctoral education,” Noonan said. “I’ve spent time at a number
of schools, and the amount of resources and experiences provided by BYU for
graduate and undergraduate research is amazing.”
Whether it’s a rattlesnake or
a common garden snake, BYU professors and researchers have shown that all
snakes belong to the same big family.
Stephanie Graff
Stephanie is a reporter for
The Universe campus desk and is a junior studying Communications with an
emphasis in Public Relations.
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