4.6 Article

Rapid increase in snake dietary diversity and complexity following the end-Cretaceous mass extinction

Journal

PLOS BIOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3001414

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DGE 1841052]
  2. David and Lucile Packard Foundation

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The Cenozoic era was a period of significant ecological changes on Earth due to the extinction of non-avian dinosaurs and the formation of new biogeographic theaters and habitats. Snakes experienced massive ecological diversification, evolving novel dietary adaptations and prey preferences. The study found that dietary niche breadths remained constant per lineage, with rapid increases in dietary diversity occurring in the early Cenozoic era. Explosive bursts of trophic innovation occurred after colonization of specific regions by certain groups of snakes, highlighting the importance of dietary ecology shifts in driving adaptive radiation in snakes.
The Cenozoic marked a period of dramatic ecological opportunity in Earth history due to the extinction of non-avian dinosaurs as well as to long-term physiographic changes that created new biogeographic theaters and new habitats. Snakes underwent massive ecological diversification during this period, repeatedly evolving novel dietary adaptations and prey preferences. The evolutionary tempo and mode of these trophic ecological changes remain virtually unknown, especially compared with co-radiating lineages of birds and mammals that are simultaneously predators and prey of snakes. Here, we assemble a dataset on snake diets (34,060 observations on the diets of 882 species) to investigate the history and dynamics of the multidimensional trophic niche during the global radiation of snakes. Our results show that per-lineage dietary niche breadths remained remarkably constant even as snakes diversified to occupy disparate outposts of dietary ecospace. Rapid increases in dietary diversity and complexity occurred in the early Cenozoic, and the overall rate of ecospace expansion has slowed through time, suggesting a potential response to ecological opportunity in the wake of the end-Cretaceous mass extinction. Explosive bursts of trophic innovation followed colonization of the Nearctic and Neotropical realms by a group of snakes that today comprises a majority of living snake diversity. Our results indicate that repeated transformational shifts in dietary ecology are important drivers of adaptive radiation in snakes and provide a framework for analyzing and visualizing the evolution of complex ecological phenotypes on phylogenetic trees.

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