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1 defining features of squamates (lizards and snakes).
2 gination like a rapid strike from a venomous snake.
3 obra, a highly venomous, medically important snake.
4 orming the jaw articulation evolve faster in snakes.
5 atively impacting reproductive output of the snakes.
6 pport a terrestrial, nonfossorial origin for snakes.
7 se (IBD), a serious transmissible disease of snakes.
8 ses from five clinically relevant species of snakes.
9 as mammals and diverse groups of lizards and snakes.
10 ious disease originally described in captive snakes.
11 ophiodiicola and SFD occur in wild European snakes.
12 nd was present in the common ancestor of all snakes.
13 of turtles and not in the eyes of anoles and snakes.
14 erlie the extreme elongation of the trunk in snakes.
15 limb development were not completely lost in snakes.
16 ppression events in the ancestor of advanced snakes.
17 consumed significantly higher percentages of snakes.
18 e of vertebrates, including fish, but not in snakes.
19 atterns in the distribution and abundance of snakes.
20 stor with a recently described deltavirus in snakes.
21 e coevolutionary arms race between newts and snakes.
22 rophic loss of amphibians, a food source for snakes.
23 chromosome in Thamnophis and other advanced snakes.
26 ose to alpha1-heme while its aliphatic chain snakes along a shallow cavity making hydrophobic interac
27 ening of the mouth' procedure was found in a snake, along with indicators of the poor conditions in w
31 tionary fate of the rods in a diurnal garter snake and test two competing hypotheses: (i) that the ro
32 c patterns of facultative parthenogenesis in snakes and a sex-linked color mutation in the ball pytho
33 erosaurs, birds, and bats or limblessness in snakes and amphisbaenians, can be recognized as classica
34 ritating sprays, and mimicry of plant parts, snakes and bird droppings, has been extensively document
35 ural creatures, from fish and cephalopods to snakes and birds, combine neural control, sensory feedba
36 lvinar: feedforward processing for images of snakes and cortico-pulvinar-cortical integration for ima
37 recapitulate aspects of these failure-prone snakes and elucidate how re-encountering previously defo
40 y models are more appropriate for monitoring snakes and other elusive species, but that population tr
41 e analyses of wild type versus lavender corn snakes and show that the color-producing endosomes of al
42 of gamma oscillations in the Early phase for snakes and the Late phase for monkey faces, but no signi
44 ranids, in addition to iguanas, caenophidian snakes, and lacertid lizards, are another squamate group
46 ern of hippocampal organization (in lizards, snakes, and the tuatara Sphenodon) that differs substant
47 le species, including crocodilians, lizards, snakes, and tuataras, with negative impacts on conservat
48 lium of ciliary body of garter snakes, queen snakes, anole lizards, snapping turtles, and painted tur
51 shifts to mimetic coloration in nonvenomous snakes are highly correlated with coral snakes in both s
52 e show that the exceptionally long trunks of snakes are likely to result from heterochronic changes i
53 l relatively distantly related Hydrophis sea snakes are polymorphic for shortwave sensitive visual pi
55 fact, these populations of Eastern Hog-nosed Snakes are so resistant to TTX that the potential for cu
57 hromosomes and further enhances the value of snakes as a model for studying sex chromosome evolution.
59 e similarly explained by spatial factors but snake assemblages facing dry summers are more affected b
61 semblages, and determine the extent in which snake assemblages under distinct climatological regimes
62 elated factors best explain the structure of snake assemblages within a same climatological regime.
63 conditions in structuring the CBD and PBD of snake assemblages, and determine the extent in which sna
64 ct stages, including squamate (African house snake), birds (chicken, duck, pigeon, ostrich, emu and z
68 rmance of a diversity of non-sand-specialist snakes but overestimates the capability of those snakes
69 foraged less in the presence of its familiar snake, but within a month both foraged less in the prese
72 ces of a missed strike when hunting venomous snakes can be deadly [5], so the kicking strikes of secr
73 verse phenotypes, exemplified by lizards and snakes, can and do arise from differential selection act
77 33 carcasses and 303 moulted skins from wild snakes collected from 2010-2016 in Great Britain and the
79 We document the collapse of a Neotropical snake community after the invasive fungal pathogen Batra
82 f snake predators on Orchid Island, with the snakes consuming lizard eggs when green turtle eggs are
83 ted reproduction in a population of pitviper snakes (copperhead, Agkistrodon contortrix), a live-bear
84 s given in response to leopards, eagles, and snakes could be well distinguished, while the inclusion
86 tnatal retinal growth in squamates (lizards, snakes), despite their exceptional array of ecologies an
87 nsistent with previous studies, and with the Snake Detection Theory, the EPN was significantly larger
89 , specifically between female calls given to snakes, eagles and during aggression, as well as between
90 e study period in red snapper (58%) and king snake eel (37%), indicating likely episodic exposure, wh
91 lefish (Lopholatilus chamaeleonticeps), king snake eel (Ophichthus rex), and red snapper (Lutjanus ca
100 Two groups have studied the loss of limbs in snake evolution by focusing on a long-distance cis-actin
101 bility that re-emergence of hindlimbs during snake evolution did not require de novo re-evolution of
106 dicate fossorial adaptation, suggesting that snakes evolved from burrowing rather than marine ancesto
108 Among vertebrates, squamates (lizards and snakes) exhibit remarkable morphological and development
110 ermal conditions best explain CBD and PBD of snakes for the whole AF, whereas water-related factors b
111 snakes share features with fossil and modern snakes (for example, recurved teeth with labial and ling
112 il skin, from a 10 million-year-old colubrid snake from the Late Miocene Libros Lagerstatte (Teruel,
119 y, our genome could serve as a reference for snake genomes, support evolutionary studies and enable v
129 in peptide derived from the venom of the sea snake, Hydrophis cyanocyntus, using in vivo models of in
130 mous snakes are highly correlated with coral snakes in both space and time, providing overwhelming su
132 cts stymied the locomotion of a diversity of snakes in our previous studies (Marvi et al., 2014) and
134 BD) and phylogenetic (PBD) beta-diversity of snakes in the Atlantic Forest (AF) hotspot, South Americ
136 carrying capacity were noted in APAP-treated snakes indicated by a 50-60% increase in methemoglobin l
141 hysiological resistance in Eastern Hog-nosed Snakes is conferred by an alternate genetic mechanism.
143 sis that the genetic distinctiveness of Iowa snakes is due to a combination of isolation and historic
144 adapted functional types, and the origin of snakes is marked by the highest rates of phenotypic evol
149 c frustration: excess volume and correlated "snake-like" ionic transport; the latter infers correlate
151 ranscription factor binding site lost in the snake lineage reinstated full in vivo function to the sn
153 oreover, legs may have re-emerged in extinct snake lineages [1-5], suggesting that the mechanisms of
157 test if population sizes across lineages of snakes, lizards, turtles, mammals, birds, salamanders an
160 by using alternative opsin alleles, some sea snakes may add a third opsin spectral class to their ret
161 We report that, unlike in other vertebrates, snake mesoderm-specific enhancers are mostly located wit
163 y 'end point' and suggesting that insect and snake mimicry may have different evolutionary dynamics.
164 calculation reveals how wave shape in these snakes minimizes material memory effects and optimizes e
166 discriminate 4 categories of visual stimuli (snakes, monkey faces, monkey hands and simple geometrica
167 p control incorporating previously described snake muscle activation patterns and body-buckling dynam
168 or monitoring an insular population of grass snakes (Natrix helvetica) and considered covariates infl
170 quantitative information on captures of 484 snakes of five species (rhinoceros vipers Bitis nasicorn
172 Island by reducing predation from egg-eating snakes (Oligodon formosanus); this predator is not abund
176 ophiodiicola has been isolated from captive snakes outside North America, the pathogen has not been
177 nearly chromosome-quality genome of the corn snake Pantherophis guttatus The assembly is 1.71 Gb long
180 ras, taipans, etc.) and ~60 fully marine sea snakes, plus eight independently marine, amphibious sea
184 ing Pacific newts (Taricha) and their garter snake predators (Thamnophis) in western North America ha
185 nary arms races between amphibians and their snake predators around the world, and reveals remarkable
186 nests is the cause for the high abundance of snake predators on Orchid Island, with the snakes consum
188 wn that nerve terminals exposed to spider or snake presynaptic neurotoxins degenerate as a result of
189 gmented epithelium of ciliary body of garter snakes, queen snakes, anole lizards, snapping turtles, a
190 predation rates (i.e., rates of predation by snakes, raptors, or mesocarnivores) did not differ among
191 s, which are responsible for the majority of snake-related deaths and injuries in Latin America.
195 s indicated that isolates from European wild snakes reside in a clade distinct from the North America
197 completely limbless, basal and intermediate snakes retain pelvic girdles and small rudiments of the
198 ly assembled transcriptome of the Cape coral snake reveals that organoids express high levels of toxi
200 The Hells Canyon Complex (HCC) along the Snake River (Idaho-Oregon border, U.S.A.) encompasses th
201 or the Animas River particles to 45% for the Snake River particles, indicating that particle-bound, o
203 n tholeiitic basaltic glass from Hawaii, the Snake River Plain, and Iceland, to investigate the onset
205 rating the phylogenetic similarity between a snake's diet and the species used to measure its potency
206 uated the rodents' risk-assessment from each snake-separately, together and in combination with barn
208 rs, biologists have accepted that all extant snakes share the same ZW sex chromosomes derived from a
209 reflecting its use in grasping prey, whereas snakes show a correlation between diet and the shape of
211 Theory, the EPN was significantly larger for snake skin pictures than for lizard skin and bird plumag
212 hat the EPN snake effect is partly driven by snake skin scale patterns which are otherwise rare in na
215 ite possessing exaggerated traits, with some snakes so resistant to TTX they would be unaffected by a
216 c and phylogenetic data across all New World snake species to demonstrate that shifts to mimetic colo
219 spectacularly demonstrate how transplanting snake-specific genetic changes found uniquely in serpent
221 ortical facilitation, for ancestral threats (snakes, spiders), but not for modern threats, positive i
222 cies) of the living diversity of lizards and snakes (squamates), we investigate rates, trajectories a
224 respond to mapped gene expression domains in snakes, suggesting that their primaxial domain is patter
226 However, populations of the common garter snake (T. sirtalis) have overcome this defense, largely
227 coevolution between predatory common garter snakes (Th. sirtalis) and their toxic newt prey exhibiti
228 ptive immune defences of captive-born garter snakes Thamnophis elegans using a reciprocal transplant
229 tudied interaction between the Sierra garter snake (Thamnophis couchii) and sympatric prey, the rough
231 se, the EPN was larger for partially exposed snakes than for partially exposed lizards and birds.
233 s (MTs) are natural toxins produced by mamba snakes that primarily bind to muscarinic acetylcholine r
234 er positive selection in elapids, and in sea snakes they have undergone multiple shifts in spectral s
235 kin lesions were mild in most cases, in some snakes they were severe and were considered likely to ha
236 oxin (TTX), has arisen in several species of snakes through coevolutionary arms races with toxic amph
238 In laboratory experiments, we challenged snakes to move across a uniform substrate and through a
242 of juice blends containing a higher ratio of snake tomato were higher and samples stored at room temp
243 ntial of small peptides to neutralize lethal snake toxins in vitro, establishing a potential route to
244 abies virus glycoprotein, with homologies to snake toxins, has the ability to alter behaviour in anim
246 We study the desert-specialist shovel-nosed snake traversing a model sand and find body inertia is n
248 bust and reproducible repeated activation of snake TRPA1 channels heterologously expressed in non-neu
249 g localities, with lower newt TTX levels and snake TTX resistance at the northern latitudes, and high
254 r disparate evolutionary trends, lizards and snakes unexpectedly share a common pattern of trait inte
255 n analogous neofunctionalization occurred in snake venom alpha-neurotoxins upon loss of another pair
256 -4 does not afford direct protection against snake venom because it is actually a poor inhibitor of s
257 munoglobulins with the ability to neutralize snake venom components and to mitigate the progression o
258 oxinologists to comprehensively characterize snake venom compositions, unravel the molecular mechanis
262 diversification of one prominent family, the snake venom metalloproteinases (SVMPs) that play key rol
263 ith fractions of C. atrox venom suggest that snake venom metalloproteinases are largely responsible f
264 ers and inhibits the proteolytic activity of snake venom metalloproteinases from five clinically rele
266 at the MP-4 contributes significantly to the snake venom neutralization activity of M. pruriens seeds
267 ify the protein(s) that may be important for snake venom neutralization and elucidate its mechanism o
268 re, we outline the steps necessary to purify snake venom phosphodiesterase I (SVP) and describe two a
270 ssessing phosphodiesterase activity, such as snake venom phosphodiesterase, mammalian ectonucleotide
273 y of research on snake venom, many facets of snake venom systems, such as the physiology and regulati
276 between antivenom antibodies and epitopes on snake venom toxins, a high-throughput immuno-profiling s
277 hole venom(s) and contain antibodies against snake venom toxins, but also against other antigens.
278 logy, provide insight into the regulation of snake venom, and broadly highlight the biological insigh
279 Despite the extensive body of research on snake venom, many facets of snake venom systems, such as
282 co plant extract (in agonist assay mode) and snake venoms (in mixed antagonist-agonist assay mode).
283 Varespladib was tested against several whole snake venoms and isolated PLA(2) toxins, demonstrating p
289 ic bioactives from mixtures of standards and snake venoms, revealing active peptides and coagulopathi
290 studies indicating that primates can detect snakes very rapidly and also cue in to faces for informa
292 t reptiles [11-15] indicates that the fossil snake was pale-colored in ventral regions; dorsal and la
293 The proximate cause of death in APAP-treated snakes was likely acute methemoglobinemia and respirator
295 d prevalence in this state, 786 free-ranging snakes were examined for skin lesions consistent with op
297 es but overestimates the capability of those snakes which suffer high lateral slipping of the body.
298 le ran to the scene, physically attacked the snake (with bites and hits), and pulled the victim to sa
299 a unique glimpse into ecological patterns of snakes within an African landscape half a century ago.
300 e most predators, and that Eastern Hog-nosed Snakes within newt range are highly resistant to TTX.