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How phylogeny and foraging ecology drive the level of chemosensory exploration in lizards and snakes

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DataONE2020-06-30 更新2025-04-19 收录
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The chemical senses are crucial for squamates (lizards and snakes). The extent to which squamates utilize their chemosensory system, however, varies greatly among taxa and species’ foraging strategies, and played an influential role in squamate evolution. In lizards, Scleroglossa evolved a state where species use chemical cues to search for food (active-foragers), while Iguania retained the use of vision to hunt prey (ambush-foragers). However, such strict dichotomy is flawed since shifts in foraging modes have occurred in all clades. Here, we attempted to disentangle effects of foraging ecology from phylogenetic trait conservatism as leading cause of the disparity in chemosensory investment among squamates. To do so, we used species’ tongue-flick rate (TFR) in absence of ecological relevant chemical stimuli as a proxy for its fundamental level of chemosensory investigation, i.e. baseline TFR. Based on literature data of nearly 100 species and using phylogenetic comparative methods, we ...
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2025-04-03
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