Asymmetry of mandibular dentition is associated with dietary specialization in snail-eating snakes

Background In vertebrates, the left-and-right pairs of homologous organs are generally present in equal numbers. A remarkable exception is snail-eating snakes in the family Pareidae: almost all the pareid snakes have much more teeth on the right mandible than on the left for functional specializatio...

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Main Author: Masaki Hoso
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2017-03-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/3011.pdf
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spelling doaj-bcbc509a9f554f7a873442934e40d3ac2020-11-24T22:56:13ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592017-03-015e301110.7717/peerj.3011Asymmetry of mandibular dentition is associated with dietary specialization in snail-eating snakesMasaki Hoso0Hakubi Center for Advanced Research, Kyoto University, Kyoto, JapanBackground In vertebrates, the left-and-right pairs of homologous organs are generally present in equal numbers. A remarkable exception is snail-eating snakes in the family Pareidae: almost all the pareid snakes have much more teeth on the right mandible than on the left for functional specialization in feeding on the dextral majority of land snails. Because the only exceptional species with symmetric dentition has been regarded as a slug-eater, the extent of dietary specialization on slugs could shape the degree of the lateral asymmetry of mandibular dentition (dentition asymmetry) even among snail eaters. Methods To test this, I compared the morphology and behavior of two sympatric species of Taiwanese snail-eating snakes, Pareas atayal and P. formosensis. Results Specimens collected in the same locality showed that the dentition asymmetry of P. formosensis was significantly smaller than that of P. atayal. Congruent to its weak asymmetry, P. formosensis showed a strong preference of slugs to snails in the feeding experiment. Discussion The dietary specialization of P. formosensis on slugs would contribute to niche partitioning from the sympatric congener P. atayal. This study suggests that the diverse variation in the dentition asymmetry of pareid snakes is the result of their dietary specialization and divergence.https://peerj.com/articles/3011.pdfPredationEvolutionary noveltyLeft–right asymmetryAdaptationSpecialization
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Masaki Hoso
spellingShingle Masaki Hoso
Asymmetry of mandibular dentition is associated with dietary specialization in snail-eating snakes
PeerJ
Predation
Evolutionary novelty
Left–right asymmetry
Adaptation
Specialization
author_facet Masaki Hoso
author_sort Masaki Hoso
title Asymmetry of mandibular dentition is associated with dietary specialization in snail-eating snakes
title_short Asymmetry of mandibular dentition is associated with dietary specialization in snail-eating snakes
title_full Asymmetry of mandibular dentition is associated with dietary specialization in snail-eating snakes
title_fullStr Asymmetry of mandibular dentition is associated with dietary specialization in snail-eating snakes
title_full_unstemmed Asymmetry of mandibular dentition is associated with dietary specialization in snail-eating snakes
title_sort asymmetry of mandibular dentition is associated with dietary specialization in snail-eating snakes
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Background In vertebrates, the left-and-right pairs of homologous organs are generally present in equal numbers. A remarkable exception is snail-eating snakes in the family Pareidae: almost all the pareid snakes have much more teeth on the right mandible than on the left for functional specialization in feeding on the dextral majority of land snails. Because the only exceptional species with symmetric dentition has been regarded as a slug-eater, the extent of dietary specialization on slugs could shape the degree of the lateral asymmetry of mandibular dentition (dentition asymmetry) even among snail eaters. Methods To test this, I compared the morphology and behavior of two sympatric species of Taiwanese snail-eating snakes, Pareas atayal and P. formosensis. Results Specimens collected in the same locality showed that the dentition asymmetry of P. formosensis was significantly smaller than that of P. atayal. Congruent to its weak asymmetry, P. formosensis showed a strong preference of slugs to snails in the feeding experiment. Discussion The dietary specialization of P. formosensis on slugs would contribute to niche partitioning from the sympatric congener P. atayal. This study suggests that the diverse variation in the dentition asymmetry of pareid snakes is the result of their dietary specialization and divergence.
topic Predation
Evolutionary novelty
Left–right asymmetry
Adaptation
Specialization
url https://peerj.com/articles/3011.pdf
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