Asia Research News 2020

Page 8

ENVIRONMENT

LIZARD AND SNAKE SIZE UNRELATED TO CLIMATE The relationship between body size and climate in lizards and snakes is more complex than originally thought. For well over a century, scientists have thought climate is a key factor affecting the evolution of animal body sizes. However, a recent study has shown that, for squamates, a group of reptiles that includes lizards and snakes, there are no consistent global correlations between body size and climate. Several competing hypotheses have tried to explain the role of climate in body size evolution. The heat conservation hypothesis posits that larger body sizes in endotherm animals, which generate body heat internally, are more beneficial for heat conservation in colder, higher latitudes. This is because heat is lost more slowly as the surface-area-to-volume ratio diminishes. The water availability hypothesis suggests that larger body sizes are also beneficial for conserving water in dry habitats because the larger surfacearea-to-volume ratio means they do not

readily lose as much water. However, there is very little evidence that these patterns are true for ectotherms, animals that rely on external sources for body heat, such as reptiles. Researchers from Universiti Malaysia Sarawak collaborated with an international team of scientists to investigate these hypotheses in squamates. They used multiple analytical approaches to test the role of temperature, precipitation, seasonality and food availability as drivers of body mass using existing size and distribution data on more than 9,000 squamate species. Their analysis did not support a universal, consistent mechanism for climate-driven size evolution in squamates. Instead, they found several different patterns for different continents, squamate families, and species. For example, 53% of snake families showed evidence of a water availability hypothesis at play, with larger body sizes

ASIA RE SEA RC H N EWS 202 0

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Further information

Professor Indraneil Das | E-mail: idas@unimas.my Institute of Biodiversity and Environmental Conservation Universiti Malaysia Sarawak

found in drier habitats. Also, hypotheses that were supported in most continents for snakes were not supported in most continents for lizards, and vice versa. “Our results suggest that climate is not necessarily the most important driver of size evolution in squamates,” says Indraneil Das, a conservation biologist at Universiti Malaysia Sarawak. “Many other factors may also influence body size, including competition for resources, evolutionary history and predation.” Climate may indirectly influence body size through spatial distribution, but the team cautions against adopting any climate-size relationships as general rules, at least until their generality has been properly tested on large, extensive datasets. Being able to identify predictable relationships between size and geography is key to understanding local and large-scale patterns of biodiversity.


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IS TURMERIC PACKAGING THE FUTURE FOR SUPERMARKET SHELVES?

2min
page 15

CATCHING CANCER EARLY

4min
pages 60-61

AQAMAN TAKES AIM AT RARE NEURODEGENERATIVE DISEASES

2min
page 64

FINDING THE GENES THAT TURN ON JAPANESE ENCEPHALITIS

2min
page 65

DUAL STEM CELL THERAPY FOR REPAIRING FAILED HEARTS

1min
page 66

PROTEIN LINKS CHILDHOOD STRESS TO IRRITABLE BOWEL SYNDROME

1min
page 58

THE GENE RESPONSIBLE FOR COGNITIVE DEFECTS IN DOWN SYNDROME

1min
page 52

SCHOOLS AND MEDIA KEY TO CUTTING FINANCIAL ILLITERACY

2min
page 39

GIANTS IN HISTORY THE ECONOMIST WHO HIGHLIGHTED THE IMPORTANCE OF AGRICULTURE

1min
page 38

PEOPLE: NEWS IN BRIEF

1min
page 38

THE PHYSICIST WHO MEASURED RADIOACTIVE DECAY

1min
page 36

GRAVITY MYSTERIES

3min
pages 34-35

ON THE HUNT FOR PRIMORDIAL BLACK HOLES

4min
pages 32-33

GAS COULD BE INSULATING AN UNDERGROUND OCEAN ON PLUTO

2min
pages 30-31

GIANTS IN HISTORY THE CHEMIST WHO PROBED THE ORIGINS OF LIFE

1min
page 29

SPACE: NEWS IN BRIEF

2min
pages 28-29

MAKING NEW CATALYSTS FROM UNIQUE METALLIC ALLOYS

3min
pages 26-27

Asia Research News 2020

2min
pages 24-25

THE FATHER OF VIDEOCONFERENCING

1min
page 23

PHOTON SIEVE WIDENS VIEW OF DYNAMIC HOLOGRAMS

4min
pages 20-22

COMPUTING WITH SPINS OF LIGHT

2min
pages 18-19

TAGGING FOR METAL ALLOYS

1min
page 17

GIANTS IN HISTORY MEASURING THE OCEANS' CAPACITY TO PROTECT THE PLANET

1min
page 7

ENVIRONMENT: NEWS IN BRIEF

2min
pages 6-7

News in Brief: Technology

1min
page 16

GIANTS IN HISTORY THE SCIENTIST WHO DISCOVERED WHY JELLYFISH GLOW

1min
page 14

GIANT JELLYFISH GENOME REVEALS EVOLUTION OF HUNTING

2min
pages 12-13

A Hero of the environment

1min
page 11

CONVERTING CO2 INTO SUSTAINABLE FUELS

2min
page 10

LIZARD AND SNAKE SIZE UNRELATED TO CLIMATE

3min
pages 8-9
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