Aussie snakes and lizards trace back to Asia

Deadly snakes are among Australia's most iconic animals. Now a new study led by the Australian National University (ANU) has helped explain how they descended from creatures that have come from Asia over the past 30 million years.

Lead researcher Dr Paul Oliver said about 85 per cent of more than 1000 snake and lizard species in Australia descended from creatures that floated across waters from Asia to Australia.

The research helps explain how Australia has become home to about 11 per cent of the world's 6300 reptile species - the highest proportion of any country around the world.

"Around 30 million years ago it appears that the world changed, and subsequently there was an influx of lizard and snakes into Australia," said Dr Oliver from the ANU Research School of Biology.

"We think this is linked to how Australia's rapid movement north, by continental movement standards, has changed ocean currents and global climates."

The researchers conducted the study using animal tree-of-life data combined with empirical evidence and simulations.

The origins for reptiles contrast with other famous Australian animal groups including marsupials and birds, which include many more species descended from ancestors that lived on Gondwana, a super continent that included Australia, Antarctica, South America, Africa and Madagascar.

Dr Oliver said that the study found that the immigration of reptiles into Australia was clustered in time.

"The influx of lizards and snakes into Australia corresponds with a time when fossil evidence suggests animal and plant communities underwent major changes across the world," he said.

"The movement of Australia may have been a key driver of these global changes."

Read the full ANU study.

4 comments

Yes yes - but how did they all end up in Canberra ?

:-))

:) Raphael. Or on my country farm backyard in the 1950s. Amazing creatures.

So good at 'invading' ... have stepped on one, had one entangled in the back wheel of my pushbike when going to school, tiger snake biting my dad whilst on horseback put him in hospital ... so many 'snake stories' in my family.

Collected baby browns in a coffee jar as a kid, from a 'cubby house' in the haystack.

Oh my

remind me no to mess with you.

dont want to find snakes under my sheets 

No worries Raphael. I've given them up in retirement except for this character a while back ... who decided to come into the house. Mexican stand-off on the back step ... me with broom, ambitious python with attitude. Very feisty reptile

Over 3 metres long by my calculations. He/she'd been around for a couple of weeks.

Jesus 

i would’ve call the rspca

must be looking for food ?

The snakes used to steal the cat's milk and lived under the house.

You are safe pete because they will not bite their own kind.

Send all snakes to the island of foxes. Even foxes need food, or is it the other way round????

4 comments



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