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Oldest
fossil evidence of modern African venomous snakes found in Tanzania
Oldest
fossil evidence of modern African venomous snakes found in Tanzania
Date:
March 20,
2014
Source:
Ohio University
Summary:
Scientists have found the oldest definitive fossil
evidence of modern, venomous snakes in Africa. The newly discovered fossils demonstrate
that elapid snakes -- such as cobras, kraits and sea snakes -- were present in
Africa as early as 25 million years ago. Elapids belong to a larger group of
snakes known as colubroids, active foragers that use a variety of methods,
including venom, to capture and kill prey.
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Ohio
University scientists have found the oldest definitive fossil evidence of
modern, venomous snakes in Africa, according to a new study published March 19
in the journal PLOS ONE.
The newly
discovered fossils demonstrate that elapid snakes -- such as cobras, kraits and
sea snakes -- were present in Africa as early as 25 million years ago, said
lead author Jacob McCartney, a postdoctoral researcher in the Ohio University
Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine. He's part of a team that has been
examining the Rukwa Rift Basin of Tanzania over the last decade to understand
environmental change through time in the East African Rift System.
Elapids
belong to a larger group of snakes known as colubroids, active foragers that
use a variety of methods, including venom, to capture and kill prey.
Colubroid
fossils are documented as early as 50 million years ago. But they weren't
expected to constitute such a large part of the African snake fauna 25 million
years ago, as they became dominant in Europe and North America much later.
"In the
Oligocene epoch, from about 34 to 23 million years ago, we would have expected
to see a fauna dominated by booid snakes, such as boas and pythons. These are
generally 'sit and wait' constricting predators that hide and ambush passing
prey," McCartney said.
In fact, the
recent study includes a description of the oldest evidence of African booid
snakes, he said. The researchers have named this new species Rukwanyoka
holmani; the genus name combines the Rukwa region name with the Swahili
word for snake, and the species name is in honor of J. Alan Holman, a
paleontologist and mentor.
However, the
team was surprised to discover that the fauna actually revealed more colubroids
than booids. That higher-than-expected concentration of colubroid snakes
suggests that the local environment became more open and seasonally dry -- and,
in turn, more hospitable to these active foraging types of snakes that don't
require cover to hide and ambush prey -- at an earlier time in Africa than in
most other parts of the world, as documented in previous studies.
"This
finding gives further strength to the idea that tectonic activity in the East
African Rift has helped to shape animal habitats in fascinating ways,"
said Nancy Stevens, an associate professor of biomedical sciences at Ohio
University and co-author of the study. "The fossils suggest a fundamental
shift toward more active and potentially venomous snakes that could exert very
different pressures on the local fauna."
More fossils
from additional locations should indicate whether colubroid snakes dominated
all of Africa during the Oligocene or just the local region around the Rukwa
Rift, McCartney said.
The study
published in PLOS ONE describes eight different types of fossil snakes
from the Rukwa Rift (five colubroid and three booid), with vertebrae ranging in
length from 2.6 mm to just over 5 mm.
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials
provided by Ohio University.
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- Jacob A. McCartney, Nancy J. Stevens, Patrick M. O’Connor. The Earliest Colubroid-Dominated Snake Fauna from Africa: Perspectives from the Late Oligocene Nsungwe Formation of Southwestern Tanzania. PLoS ONE, 2014; 9 (3): e90415 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0090415