Repeated dietary shifts in elapid snakes (Squamata: Elapidae) revealed by ancestral state reconstruction

Author:

Maritz Bryan1ORCID,Barends Jody M1ORCID,Mohamed Riaaz1ORCID,Maritz Robin A1ORCID,Alexander Graham J2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biodiversity and Conservation Biology, University of the Western Cape, Private Bag X17, Bellville, South Africa

2. School of Animal, Plant & Environmental Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, PO Wits, South Africa

Abstract

Abstract Identifying the traits of ancestral organisms can reveal patterns and drivers of organismal diversification. Unfortunately, reconstructing complex multistate traits (such as diet) remains challenging. Adopting a ‘reconstruct, then aggregate’ approach in a maximum likelihood framework, we reconstructed ancestral diets for 298 species of elapid snakes. We tested whether different prey types were correlated with one another, tested for one-way contingency between prey type pairs, and examined the relationship between snake body size and dietary composition. We demonstrate that the evolution of diet was characterized by niche conservation punctuated by repeated dietary shifts. The ancestor of elapids most likely fed on reptiles and possibly amphibians, with deviations from this ancestral diet occurring repeatedly due to shifts into marine environments and changes in body size. Moreover, we demonstrate important patterns of prey use, including one-way dependency—most obviously the inclusion of eggs being dependent on a diet that already included the producers of those eggs. Despite imperfect dietary data, our approach produced a robust overview of dietary evolution. Given the paucity of natural history information for many organisms, our approach has the potential to increase the number of lineages to which ancestral state reconstructions of multistate traits can be robustly applied.

Funder

National Research Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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