Adaptive developmental plasticity in snakes
- 15 September 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 431 (7006) , 261-262
- https://doi.org/10.1038/431261a
Abstract
The morphology of organisms is generally well matched to their environment, presumably because expression of their genes is tailored either at the population or the individual level to suit local conditions: for example, snake populations that persistently encounter large prey may accumulate gene mutations that specify a large head size, or head growth may be increased in individual snakes to meet local demands (adaptive developmental plasticity)1. Here we test the relative contributions of genetics and environment to the jaw sizes of two tiger snake populations: one that consumes small prey on the mainland, and an island population that relies on larger prey and has a larger jaw size. Although the idea of adaptive plasticity in response to environmental pressures is controversial2, we find that both factors influence the difference in jaw size between the two populations, and the influence of developmental plasticity is greater in the island population.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Phenotypic PlasticityPublished by Project MUSE ,2001
- Rejection of non-adaptive hypotheses for intraspecific variation in trophic morphology in gape-limited predatorsBiological Journal of the Linnean Society, 1997
- Testing the Adaptive Plasticity Hypothesis: Density-Dependent Selection on Manipulated Stem Length in Impatiens capensisThe American Naturalist, 1996
- The Definition and Recognition of Biological AdaptationAmerican Zoologist, 1980