Arid
Reproductive biology and food habits of horned adders, Bitis caudalis (Viperidae), from southern Africa
Shine, R; Branch, WR; Harlow, PS; Webb, JK
通讯作者Shine, R
来源期刊COPEIA
ISSN0045-8511
EISSN1938-5110
出版年1998
期号2页码:391-401
英文摘要

Kerned adders (Bitis caudalis) are small heavy-bodied viperid snakes widely dis tributed across a range of habitat types in southern Africa. Measurement and dissection of 580 preserved specimens in museum collections provided information on morpholopy, food habits, and reproductive biology of this species. in particular, it enabled us to assess the effects of sex and habitat type (arid to mesic) on adult body sizes and shapes, dietary composition, and reproductive output. Female horned adders mature at larger sizes than do males and grow much larger. At the same snout-vent length, females have larger heads and shorter tails than do males. Arid-zone snakes are longer and thinner than conspecifics from more mesic areas and have longer tails and larger heads. Horned adders feed primarily on lizards (especially lacertids, skinks, and geckos) but also take other small vertebrates. Dietary composition varies according to the snake’s body size, sex, and geographic location: endothermic prey are taken mostly by larger snakes; by females rather than males; and by arid-zone rather than mesic-habitat snakes. Most prey are small relative to predator size, especially in large snakes. Litter sizes (3-19 offspring) increase with maternal body size, with no significant geographic differences in this relationship. However, reproductive frequency las inferred from the proportion of adult females that were reproductive when collected) was significantly higher in mesic-habitat snakes (> 50%) than in their arid-zone relatives (15%). Habitat-associated differences in resource availability may have affected traits such as body size and shape, degree of dietary specialization, growth rates and female reproductive frequencies.


类型Article
语种英语
国家Australia ; South Africa
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000073640000010
WOS关键词SEXUAL SIZE DIMORPHISM ; PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY ; VIVIPAROUS SNAKE ; EVOLUTION ; URSINII ; LIZARD
WOS类目Zoology
WOS研究方向Zoology
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/135569
作者单位(1)Univ Sydney, Sch Biol Sci A08, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia;(2)Port Elizabeth Museum, Dept Herpetol, ZA-6013 Humewood, South Africa
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Shine, R,Branch, WR,Harlow, PS,et al. Reproductive biology and food habits of horned adders, Bitis caudalis (Viperidae), from southern Africa[J],1998(2):391-401.
APA Shine, R,Branch, WR,Harlow, PS,&Webb, JK.(1998).Reproductive biology and food habits of horned adders, Bitis caudalis (Viperidae), from southern Africa.COPEIA(2),391-401.
MLA Shine, R,et al."Reproductive biology and food habits of horned adders, Bitis caudalis (Viperidae), from southern Africa".COPEIA .2(1998):391-401.
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