Facultatively Sidewinding Snakes and the Origins of Locomotor Specialization
Author(s): Jessica L Tingle
Journal: Integrative and Comparative Biology
Published: April 2020
Abstract
AbstractSpecialist species often possess adaptations that strongly distinguish them from their relatives, obscuring the transitional steps leading to specialization. Sidewinding snakes represent an example of locomotor specialization in an elongate, limbless terrestrial vertebrate. We typically think of sidewinding as a gait that only a handful of very specialized snake species perform, mostly vipers from sandy desert environments. Some of these desert-dwelling vipers are so specialized that they only rarely use more common types of locomotion. However, some non-viper species sidewind facultatively in particular circumstances, and a few may regularly sidewind under natural conditions. Numerous accounts report facultative sidewinding in species that more typically perform other types of locomotion. I have compiled these accounts, uncovering evidence that dozens of species perform sidewinding with varying proficiency under a variety of conditions. These facultative sidewinders can reveal insight into the evolution and biomechanics of sidewinding, and they provide ample opportunities for future study.
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