Reproductive ecology of dipsadine snakes, with emphasis on South American species


Autoria(s): PIZZATTO, Ligia; CANTOR, Mauricio; OLIVEIRA, Juliana Lima de; MARQUES, Otavio A. V.; CAPOVILLA, Vinicius; MARTINS, Marcio
Contribuinte(s)

UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO

Data(s)

20/10/2012

20/10/2012

2008

Resumo

A relatively large amount of variation occurs in the reproductive ecology of tropical snakes, and this variation is generally regarded as being a consequence of seasonality in climate and prey availability. In some groups, even closely related species may differ in their reproductive ecology; however, in others it seems to be very conservative. Here we explore whether characters related to reproduction are phylogenetically constrained in a monophyletic group of snakes, the subfamily Dipsadinae, which ranges from Mexico to southern South America. We provide original data on reproduction for Leptodeira annulata, Imantodes cenchoa, and three species of Sibynomorphus from southern, southeastern and central Brazil, and data from literature for other species and populations of dipsadines. Follicular cycles were seasonal in Atractus reticulatus, Dipsa, albifrons, Hypsiglena torquata, Leptodeira maculata, L. punctata, Sibynomorphus spp. and Sibon sanniola from areas where climate is seasonal. In contrast, extended or continuous follicular cycles were recorded in Dipsas catesbyi, D. neivai, Imantodes cenchoa, Leptodeira annulata, and Ninia maculata from areas with seasonal and aseasonal climates. Testicular cycles also varied from seasonal (in H. torquiata) to continuous (in Dipsa,5 spp., Leptodeira annulata, L. maculata, N. maculata, and Sibynomorphus spp.). Most dipsadines are small (less than 500 rum SVL), and females attain sexual maturity with similar relative body size than males. Sexual dimorphism occurred in terms of SVL and tail length in most species, and clutch size tended to be small (less than five eggs). Combat behavior occurs in Imantodes cenchoa, which did not show sexual size dimorphism. Reproductive timing, for both females and males, varied among species but in general there were no differences between the tribes of Dipsadinae in most of the reproductive characteristics, such as mean body size, relative size at sexual maturity, sexual size and tail dimorphism, duration of vitellogenesis or egg-carrying in oviducts.

Identificador

HERPETOLOGICA, v.64, n.2, p.168-179, 2008

0018-0831

http://producao.usp.br/handle/BDPI/27401

10.1655/07-031.1

http://dx.doi.org/10.1655/07-031.1

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

HERPETOLOGISTS LEAGUE

Relação

Herpetologica

Direitos

restrictedAccess

Copyright HERPETOLOGISTS LEAGUE

Palavras-Chave #Dipsadinae #fecundity #follicular cycle #reproduction #sexual size dimorphism #sexual tail dimorphism #testicular cycle #AUSTRALIAN ELAPID SNAKES #SNAIL-EATING SNAKE #XENODONTINE SNAKES #LIFE-HISTORY #NIGHT SNAKE #COSTA-RICA #COLUBRIDAE #SERPENTES #BRAZIL #BIOLOGY #Zoology
Tipo

article

original article

publishedVersion