iHerp Australia Issue 14 | Page 36

D Unfortunately for those obsessed with snakes, the fossil record for these creatures is rather limited, due largely ue in part to the breadth of life's diversity, the to their delicate skeletal structure. In the transformation collective scientific effort to understand evolutionary from ancient lizard to early ancestral snake, a lot of bone relationships between various species, a field known as mass was done away with - not just limbs but also systematics, is subject to constant change and debate. shoulder and pelvic girdles. The size, number, and shape Traditionally a field based on the physical, morphological of the remaining bones are also highly modified, and a differences between groups of organisms, the rise of complete understanding of the transition from lizard-like molecular biology has seen genetics take a major role in ancestor to snake remains elusive. Limblessness evolved systematics, with many previously assumed relationships multiple times in squamate reptiles so it's clearly a useful overturned by new evidence. Genetic information can be body plan. Whether this was an adaptation to an aquatic particularly useful when studying closely-related species existence, where legs tucked against the body during so similar that their species-level relationships are practi- sinusoidal swimming eventually gave way to selection for cally impossible to define from external morphology. reduced drag and were lost entirely, or a similar selective scenario for a terrestrial, burrowing ancestor, squeezing its Nevertheless, the subtle morphological variations between way through soil, leaf-litter and other debris, is uncertain. species are hugely informative of both their evolutionary Some recent evidence, however, points towards a and ecological history. Morphological data is particularly terrestrial ancestor for snakes. interesting in terms of fossils, allowing a window of inquiry into timescales where genetic evidence is partially Whatever the origin, the snake skeleton is rather or entirely degraded beyond current sequencing simplified. In brief, it consists of a skull, vertebrae and techniques. A detailed fossil record, where available, is a ribs, with occasional vestiges of leg/hip bones. Starting true snapshot of past phenotypic variation. with the obvious, there are a LOT of vertebrae and ribs. Humans have 33 vertebrae and 12 pairs of ribs, whereas snakes can have anywhere Coastal Taipan from around 100 to over 400. Snakes’ (Oxyuranus scutellatus). vertebrae are capable of 10-30 degrees Left: annotated skull. vertical rotation and a few degrees of Below: full mount at Queensland horizontal rotation, creating a flexible and Museum, striking at a bandicoot. mobile body plan. Although, at first glance, Bones Identified: the skeleton appears to be rather uniform, 1. Compound closer investigation reveals that the spine 2. Dentary may be divided into cervical, thoracic, and 3. Frontal caudal regions. Specifically, we first find 4. Maxilla two modified, rib-less vertebrae, the atlas 5. Palatine and axis, supporting the skull and allowing 6. Pterygoid effective articulation. These are followed by 7. Parietal the cervical or neck vertebrae which are 8. Prefrontal accompanied by small, flexible ribs (these 9. Premaxilla have been lost in mammals). Next comes the 10. Postorbital larger thoracic vertebrae of the trunk, all 11. Prootic with ribs, which first increase in size and 12. Supratemporal then taper down after the mid-body. Snakes 13. Quadrate do not have a lumbar region; instead, articulated ribs continue to appear along the vertebrae into the cloacal region, homolo- gous to the human sacrum, where we find the fork-ended ‘cloacal’ ribs, otherwise known as the lymphapophyses. This denotes the end of the trunk, and on a living animal coincides with the termination of the digestive tract, waste excretion and openings of the reproductive organs, all combined in one multifunctional orifice, the cloaca. The remaining vertebrae, which support the tail, are tapering, small and devoid of ribs (although they do possess pleurapophyses, the lateral processes that form the start of the ribs). Returning to the skull, this is where structural changes become much more