Affiliation:
1. School of Natural Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, New South Wales 2109, Australia
2. Australian Institute of Marine Science, Darwin, Northern Territory 0810, Australia
Abstract
The transition from terrestrial to aquatic life by hydrophiine elapid snakes modified targets of natural selection and likely affected sexual selection also. Thus, the shift to marine life also might have affected sexual dimorphism. Our measurements of 419 preserved specimens of six species of aipysurine snakes (genera
Emydocephalus
and
Aipysurus
) revealed sexual dimorphism in mean adult snout–vent length (SVL), body width relative to SVL, lengths and widths of heads and tails relative to SVL, and eye diameter relative to head length. Females averaged larger than males in all taxa, and generally were wider-bodied with shorter and wider tails and smaller eyes. For other traits, sexual dimorphism varied among species: for example, relative head length ranged from male-biased to female-biased, and head shape (width relative to length) was highly dimorphic only in
A. laevis
. The transition to marine life may have eliminated male–male combat (reducing selection for large males) and favoured visual rather than pheromone-based mate-searching (favouring larger eyes in males). Variation in head-size dimorphism may reflect intersexual niche partitioning, with different taxa following different trajectories. Repeated evolutionary transitions from terrestrial to aquatic life in snakes provide a powerful opportunity to explore selective forces on sexually dimorphic traits.
Funder
Australian Research Council
Cited by
2 articles.
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