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dc.contributor.author MANJARREZ SILVA, FRANCISCO JAVIER
dc.contributor.author MACIAS GARCIA, CONSTANTINO DE JESUS
dc.contributor.author Drummond, Hugh
dc.creator MANJARREZ SILVA, FRANCISCO JAVIER; 79434
dc.creator MACIAS GARCIA, CONSTANTINO DE JESUS; 11240
dc.creator Drummond, Hugh;#0000-0002-7456-8470
dc.date.accessioned 2018-02-07T19:06:18Z
dc.date.available 2018-02-07T19:06:18Z
dc.date.issued 2017-06-20
dc.identifier.issn 7178–7186
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11799/68439
dc.description.abstract Morphological convergence is expected when organisms which differ in phenotype experience similar functional demands, which lead to similar associations between resource utilization and performance. To consume prey with hard exoskeletons, snakes require either specialized head morphology, or to deal with them when they are vulnerable, for example, during molting. Such attributes may in turn reduce the efficiency with which they prey on soft-bodied, slippery animals such as fish. Snakes which consume a range of prey may present intermediate morphology, such as that of Thamnophiine (Natricinae), which may be classified morphometrically across the soft–hard prey dietary boundary. In this study, we compared the dentition and head structure of populations of Thamnophis melanogaster that have entered the arthropod–crustacean (crayfish)-eating niche and those that have not, and tested for convergence between the former and two distantly related crayfish specialists of the genus Regina (R. septemvittata and R. grahamii). As a control, we included the congener T. eques. Multivariate analysis of jaw length, head length, head width, and number of maxillary teeth yielded three significant canonical variables that together explained 98.8% of the variance in the size-corrected morphological data. The first canonical variable significantly discriminated between the three species. The results show that head dimensions and number of teeth of the two Regina species are more similar to those of crayfish-eating T. melanogaster than to non-crayfish- eating snakes or of T. eques. It is unclear how particular head proportions or teeth number facilitates capture of crayfish, but our results and the rarity of soft crayfish ingestion by T. melanogaster may reflect the novelty of this niche expansion, and are consistent with the hypothesis that some populations of T. melanogaster have converged in their head morphology with the two soft crayfish-eating Regina species, although we cannot rule out the possibility of a morphological pre-adaptation to ingest crayfish. es
dc.description.sponsorship Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México: 2865/2010 and 2663/2013 es
dc.language.iso eng es
dc.publisher Ecology and Evolution. es
dc.relation.ispartofseries DOI;10.1002/ece3.3265
dc.rights openAccess es
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0
dc.subject crayfish es
dc.subject dentition es
dc.subject feeding niche es
dc.subject head structure es
dc.subject Regina es
dc.subject Thamnophis es
dc.subject.classification CIENCIAS FÍSICO MATEMÁTICAS Y CIENCIAS DE LA TIERRA
dc.title Morphological convergence in a Mexican garter snake associated with the ingestion of a novel prey es
dc.type Artículo es
dc.provenance Científica
dc.road Dorada es
dc.organismo Ciencias es
dc.ambito Internacional es
dc.cve.CenCos 21901 es
dc.audience students
dc.audience researchers
dc.type.conacyt article
dc.identificator 1


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  • Título
  • Morphological convergence in a Mexican garter snake associated with the ingestion of a novel prey
  • Autor
  • MANJARREZ SILVA, FRANCISCO JAVIER
  • MACIAS GARCIA, CONSTANTINO DE JESUS
  • Drummond, Hugh
  • Fecha de publicación
  • 2017-06-20
  • Editor
  • Ecology and Evolution.
  • Tipo de documento
  • Artículo
  • Palabras clave
  • crayfish
  • dentition
  • feeding niche
  • head structure
  • Regina
  • Thamnophis
  • Los documentos depositados en el Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México se encuentran a disposición en Acceso Abierto bajo la licencia Creative Commons: Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivar 4.0 Internacional (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)

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