NORTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY,
Press Release 2/16/17
A new study is bringing attention
to a little known and imperiled rattlesnake that slithers among the wetlands in
regions surrounding the Great Lakes.
The Eastern Massasauga rattler
was once common in such states as Indiana and Illinois. Until recent years, it
could still be found in Chicago's Cook County. But the reptile's range and
numbers have been steadily declining. In 2016, the snake was listed as
threatened under the U.S. Endangered Species Act.
In the new study, Northern
Illinois University biological sciences professor Richard
King
and his former student Eric Hileman examine the life history of the Eastern
Massasauga, revealing important local climate impacts on the snake that should
be carefully weighed when developing conservation strategies.
"Our results provide
evidence that climatic variation in the Great Lakes region strongly influences
body size, individual growth rates and key aspects of reproduction," says
Hileman, first author of the study
published in PLOS ONE, a journal of the Public Library of Science. Hileman
earned his Ph.D. in biological sciences from NIU in December and is now a
postdoctoral fellow in biology at Trent University in Ontario, Canada.
Hileman, King and more than 40
co-authors gathered and synthesized more than a century of data on the snakes
from study sites across the range of the Eastern Massasauga. Most of the data
was culled from studies conducted from the mid-1990s forward at sites in
Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin, Michigan, Iowa, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York,
as well as Ontario, Canada.
The scientists found strong
evidence for geographic variation in six of nine life-history variables. Among
the findings:
• The average body size of the snake
and the size of its offspring increased with increasing mean annual
precipitation, possibly because wetter climates yield greater prey
abundance.
• Litter sizes decreased with
increasing mean temperature, and increased by one offspring for each
1.89-degree increase in latitude, even when maternal size was held constant.
"It's been rare to look
within a species and show that these patterns exist," King says. "The
study results demonstrate that a one-size-fits all conservation strategy is not
appropriate. Rather, assessments of extinction risk and the design of
management strategies need to account for geography.”
The Eastern Massasauga snakes are
generally found in wet prairies or sedge meadows, where the reptiles employ a
sit-and-wait strategy to catch and feed on small mammals. Adult size ranges
from about 2 feet to 2 ½ feet in length. While venomous, the snakes are not
particularly aggressive or dangerous to work with.
"You're not likely to
encounter them unless you're looking for them," King says. "It's easy
to walk right by one. They're very cryptically colored to look like dead leaves
and cattails, so they blend in exceedingly well."
The reptiles suffered habitat
loss from extensive drainage of land for agriculture and development. As
recently as the 1970s, some states had bounties on the snake.
With concerns over whether they
would persist in the wild, the remaining snakes in Chicago's Cook County were
taken into a captive breeding program in 2010, King says.
"In Illinois, they've nearly
blinked out entirely," he adds. "We're probably down to one location
in the southern part of the state that has a stable population. They seem to
have stronger holds in Michigan and southern Ontario.”
The study authors believe findings
will aid Eastern Massasauga recovery efforts.
"The life-history parameter
estimates will be essential for improving models related to extinction risk and
climate change," Hileman says. "The results from these predictive
models can subsequently be used to develop site-specific management
strategies."
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