News Release

Family tree of one-fifth of global snake diversity re-written and new branch of snakes found

Peer-Reviewed Publication

University of Helsinki

Müller's ground viper (Micrelaps muelleri), a back-fanged venomous snake species, is a member of the newly described family Micrelapidae.

image: Müller's ground viper (Micrelaps muelleri), a back-fanged venomous snake species, is a member of the newly described family Micrelapidae. This particular species is found in the Levant region and the individual in this photograph is from the Israel. Photo credit: Simon Jamison view more 

Credit: Photo credit: Simon Jamison

The international researcher team have been able to reconstruct the evolutionary tree of a major group of snakes,

Elapoidea, that has proved to significant road to the construction of a complete Tree of Life for snakes.

They did it with the help of one of the biggest genomic datasets, cutting-edge algorithms and softwares

published to this date to study evolution.

It changes the evolutionary tree of Elapoidea, living superfamily of ecologically hyperdiverse snakes

(some of which are the world’s deadliest), which is spread out almost around the globe.

The team generated a gigantic genomic dataset of nearly 4600 genes – as a comparison, most datasets used for DNA taxonomy of animals are less than 10 genes! Researchers did it for members of every known elapoid families and subfamilies. They have farther used nano- and micro-computed tomographic scans for several elapoid snake species.

New major branch in the family tree of snakes

Furthermore, the researchers discovered an entirely new family within the Elapoidea superfamily (which means a rank above family in biological classification).
Among snakes, one of the most species-rich major groups is this superfamily. Snakes of this superfamily evolved in the early Cenozoic era (the Eocene to be precise), around 50 to 45 million years ago, as estimated by the researchers of the present paper. Elapoidea has some 700 species divided into several families.

The relatives of the ancient snakes still slither among us

Some of the deadliest snakes on the planet belong to this family, such as cobras, mambas, but also harmless and bizarre snakes like the Africa shovel-nose snakes or venomous burrowing asps that can bite without opening their mouth. While biologists indeed discover new species and genus quite often, discovering an entire family is extremely rare for vertebrates, almost once or maximum a few times in a century. This new family has two types and a total of four or five species. These snakes are found in the Levant region, Eastern and Northeastern Africa.

“Snakes are not just diverse, but they are very important ecologically. The venomous snakes are important medically as well.  What would happen if the knowledge on the evolution and classification of such an important group were in tatters?”, Sunandan Das explains.

“Everything would then get seriously impeded: From communication among scientists to research, into the evolution of venom, venom delivery systems etc., from understanding the tempo and mode of the evolution of a big chunk of the global snake diversity to popular scientific work on such group. Until now, this has exactly been the case with elapoid snakes - they are a textbook example of 'ancient, rapid radiation' and as such, a tough nut to crack, Sunandan Das concludes.

 


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