PALEONTOLOGIA 2015
Origem das serpentes
The Origin of Snakes: revealing the Ecology, Behavior, and Evolutionary History of Early Snakes - using Genomics, Phenomics, and the Fossil Record
Reconstruction of the ancestral crown-group snake, based on the new study.
Artwork by Julius Csotonyi.
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Abstract
Background
The highly derived morphology and astounding diversity of snakes has
long inspired debate regarding the ecological and evolutionary origin of
both the snake total-group (Pan-Serpentes) and crown snakes
(Serpentes). Although speculation abounds on the ecology, behavior, and
provenance of the earliest snakes, a rigorous, clade-wide analysis of
snake origins has yet to be attempted, in part due to a dearth of
adequate paleontological data on early stem snakes. Here, we present the
first comprehensive analytical reconstruction of the ancestor of crown
snakes and the ancestor of the snake total-group, as inferred using
multiple methods of ancestral state reconstruction.
We use a
combined-data approach that includes new information from the fossil
record on extinct crown snakes, new data on the anatomy of the stem
snakes Najash rionegrina, Dinilysia patagonica, and Coniophis precedens,
and a deeper understanding of the distribution of phenotypic
apomorphies among the major clades of fossil and Recent snakes.
Additionally, we infer time-calibrated phylogenies using both new
‘tip-dating’ and traditional node-based approaches, providing new
insights on temporal patterns in the early evolutionary history of
snakes.
Comprehensive ancestral state reconstructions reveal that both the
ancestor of crown snakes and the ancestor of total-group snakes were
nocturnal, widely foraging, non-constricting stealth hunters. They
likely consumed soft-bodied vertebrate and invertebrate prey that was
subequal to head size, and occupied terrestrial settings in warm,
well-watered, and well-vegetated environments. The snake total-group –
approximated by the Coniophis node – is inferred to have originated on
land during the middle Early Cretaceous (~128.5 Ma), with the
crown-group following about 20 million years later, during the Albian
stage. Our inferred divergence dates provide strong evidence for a major
radiation of henophidian snake diversity in the wake of the
Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) mass extinction, clarifying the pattern and
timing of the extant snake radiation. Although the snake crown-group
most likely arose on the supercontinent of Gondwana, our results suggest
the possibility that the snake total-group originated on Laurasia.
Our study provides new insights into when, where, and how snakes
originated, and presents the most complete picture of the early
evolution of snakes to date. More broadly, we demonstrate the striking
influence of including fossils and phenotypic data in combined analyses
aimed at both phylogenetic topology inference and ancestral state
reconstruction.
Keywords: Serpentes, Phylogeny, Ancestral state reconstruction, Divergence time estimation, Combined analysis, Fossil tip-dating
Allison Y Hsiang, Daniel J Field, Timothy H Webster, Adam DB Behlke,
Matthew B Davis, Rachel A Racicot and Jacques A Gauthier. 2015. The
Origin of Snakes: revealing the Ecology, Behavior, and Evolutionary
History of Early Snakes using Genomics, Phenomics, and the Fossil
Record. BMC Evolutionary Biology. DOI: 10.1186/s12862-015-0358-5.
Limbless triumph: The origin and diversification of snakes - http://go.shr.lc/1HsbUb8
What did the first snakes look like? http://phy.so/351261014 via @physorg_com
Data Suggests Legs and Toes in Ancestor of Living Snakes http://nyti.ms/1JxQewl
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