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Project

Tales from the horned – Exploring the functionality and evolutionary history behind horn occurrence in vipers.

Some species of snakes carry horn-like appendages either on the snout or above the eyes. Interestingly, these structures have evolved independently in multiple clades of vipers (Viperidae). Pioneer herpetologists have speculated wildly on the function of these enigmatic appendages, but nobody has studied them in detail. In this project, I will test the putative role of rostral and supra-ocular horns in concealment, water uptake, mechanosensation and thermoregulation. To that end, I will carry out a combination of behavioural observations, visual modelling, vibrometry, thermography, (electron) microscopy, histology, µ-CT scanning and 3D image reconstructions, on a selection of specimens of different species. In a final step of the project, I will combine information obtained from the functional analyses with data on the distribution, ecology and natural history of viperid species (as available in the literature and online databases) to test ideas on the ecological drivers of horn evolution.
Date:1 Nov 2020 →  Today
Keywords:SNAKES, EVOLUTION, FUNCTIONAL MORPHOLOGY
Disciplines:Animal morphology, anatomy and physiology, Vertebrate biology, Ecophysiology and ecomorphology, Biology of adaptation
Project type:Collaboration project