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Bayi mulut
besar mendorong evolusi ular pulau raksasa
Big-mouthed babies drove the evolution of giant island snakes
Date:
May 15, 2012
Source:
University of Chicago Press Journals
Summary:
The need to have big-mouthed babies drove the
evolution of giant tiger snakes on Australian islands, new research shows. The
findings offer a new dimension to the study of island gigantism and dwarfism.
.........................
Some populations of tiger snakes stranded for thousands of
years on tiny islands surrounding Australia have evolved to be giants, growing
to nearly twice the size of their mainland cousins. Now, new research in The American Naturalist suggests
that the enormity of these elapids was driven by the need to have big-mouthed
babies.
Mainland
tiger snakes, which generally max out at 35 inches (89 cm) long, patrol swampy
areas in search of frogs, their dietary staple. When sea levels rose around
10,000 years ago, some tiger snakes found themselves marooned on islands that
would become dry and frog-free. With their favorite food gone, the island
snakes "are now thriving on an altered diet consisting of skinks, rodents,
and nesting oceanic bird chicks," said study author Fabien Aubret of La
Station d'Ecologie Experimentale du CNRS Ã Moulis.
Along with
the dietary shift came dramatic changes in the snakes' adult body sizes. On
some islands, the snakes shrank, becoming significantly smaller than mainland
snakes. But other islands have produced giants, measuring 60 inches (1.5
meters) and weighing as much as three times more than mainland snakes.
Aubret
hypothesized that the size of available prey on each island was driving the
variation in body size. Snakes are gape-limited predators, meaning they swallow
their prey whole and can only dine on animals they can wrap their mouths
around. This gape limitation would be most pronounced in newborn snakes, when
their mouths are at their smallest. Simply put, baby snakes born too small to
partake of the local cuisine would have little chance to survive. Where prey
animals are larger, selection would favor larger newborn snakes -- with larger
mouths. That head start in size at birth could be the reason for larger size in
adulthood.
To test his
idea, Aubret took field expeditions to 12 islands, collecting and measuring 597
adult snakes. He released the males and non-pregnant females, and brought 72
pregnant snakes back to the lab. After the snakes gave birth, he measured each
of the 1,084 babies they produced. He then looked for correlations between
snake size at birth and the size of prey animals available on each island. He
also tested for correlations between birth size and adult size.
"The
results were unequivocal: snake body size at birth tightly matches the size of
prey available on each island," Aubret said.
As
predicted, where prey animals were bigger, newborn snakes were bigger and they
grew up to be bigger adults. Where prey animals were smaller, newborn snakes
followed suit, leading to smaller adults.
A New
Dimension to the Island Rule?
Ecologists
have long been interested in the peculiarities of island animals. Observations
of pygmy elephants and giant rats led a biologist named J. Bristol Foster to
propose what became known as the Island Rule. In general, Foster surmised, big
animals on islands tend to get smaller than mainland counterparts because of
limited access to food. Small animals tend to get larger because islands tend
to have fewer predators. Since it was proposed in the 1960s, numerous
exceptions to Foster's rule have been noted, and scientists now agree that the
ecological factors that influence island body size are far more complex than
Foster had imagined.
Aubret's
findings add yet another dimension.
"Mean
adult body size has always been used as a traditional measure in the
literature," he writes. "On the other hand, patterns of variation for
body size at birth in island populations have received, to my knowledge, no
attention at all."
Aubret's
work shows that selection isn't necessarily acting on adult body size.
"This
study confirms that adult size variations on islands may be a nonadaptive
consequence of selection acting on birth size," he said. "Animals may
become either giant or dwarf adults on islands for the simple fact that they
were born either unusually large or small bodied."
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by University of Chicago Press Journals. Note: Materials may be edited
for content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- Fabien Aubret. Body-Size Evolution on Islands: Are Adult Size Variations in Tiger Snakes a Nonadaptive Consequence of Selection on Birth Size? The American Naturalist, 179:6 (June 2012)
