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  1. #1
    Forum Moderator Stefan-A's Avatar
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    Re: Eyes

    It's not a part of their saliva, even if it does mix with saliva because they don't inject their venom.

    Well, anyway, I use the term 'harmless' to avoid the issue of whether or not they're venomous.

  2. #2
    Forum Moderator aSnakeLovinBabe's Avatar
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    Re: Eyes

    I would not start saying in presentations "these are garter snakes and they are venomous"

    people will end up killing every garter snake they see.
    Mother of many snakes and a beautiful baby girl! I am also a polymer clay artist!


  3. #3
    In Hog Heaven
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    Re: Eyes

    Quote Originally Posted by Stefan-A View Post
    It's not a part of their saliva, even if it does mix with saliva because they don't inject their venom.

    Well, anyway, I use the term 'harmless' to avoid the issue of whether or not they're venomous.
    Okay. They have their usual spit PLUS the 'venom' out of that Dubois or whatever gland. And then the TWO mix. Is that correct?

    "Harmless." I shall mention that to Dave. He may have to change the entire first part of his presentation. Not that Naturalists can't err and he's not a Herpie for sure. And he is only human... But I'd rather us give correct info than not. I'd sure HATE one of our visitors to find THIS place and come screaming back to us we gave them false or incorrect info.

    Sheesh!
    2.0 NY Eastern Garters; Peepers, Jeepers
    3.1 Western Hoggies; Kenabec, Niizh, Kokopelli, Anasazi
    3.0 Puget Garters; Kunikpok, Tungortok, 'Rockster
    1.0 Eastern Milk; Carmello

  4. #4
    "Preparing For Third shed" Steven@HumboldtHerps's Avatar
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    Re: Eyes

    Snake evolution: This conundrum has been locked in debate for many years.
    The current argument that snakes evolved from lizards still holds the most ground. But which lizards?

    For a while some theorists actually believed that the extinct line of aquatic reptiles known as the mososaurs were the predecessors to the serpentine form. While it sounds good, and mososaurs like the plesiosaur did have elongated serpentine forms, the whole "snakes crawling out of the sea" thing just didn't cut the cake. One might think that sea snakes might have been the orginal snakes, but DNA tells us they are relatively new arrivals on the evolutionary scene. It also does not explain the process of why suspected "live-bearers" such as mososaurs would revert to the egg-laying process that so many snakes today endure.

    Going backwards down the snake family tree all the way to primitive boas, sunbeam snakes, and the likes, we may find ourselves looking at something more like skinks, varanids, or anguids. Here we find long, lanky bodies and tails (many), the presence of forked tongues in some families, the evidence of limb reduction (skinks and anguids). Anguids include the legless lizards and the glass lizards (all limbless). We should also not forget that mysterious group of squamates (Remember: the order Squamata includes both snakes and lizards and...): the amphisbaenians! Look these funky sand swimmers up, and you may totally start imagining how things way back when underwent numerous trial and error "experiments". Ha! Another reminder: You don't lose your legs because you need to... Evolution doesn't work that way. You lose your legs because you're a mutant compared to the norm, and the mutation did not affect you ability to survive, and you passed the trait on.... Even if the new trait helps you perhaps survive better than your normal homies, evolution is still an accidental occurrence!

    One could surmise that skinks be left out of the list of suspects, simply because they lack the venom genes we have been talking about, and that they are along a separate (older?) lineage of lizards.

    Really, look at some pics of some amphisbaenians. Some have front stubs (limbs), and some have hind stubs!

    Here is the way I like to paint the picture (and it sure didn't happen overnight; probably took a long time....). Let say you belong to a group of lizards who somehow adapted to a more fossorial (underground) lifestyle. With each subsequent generation you have very subtle mutations whereby you, as a species, slowly change physiology. If you start chasing rodents, worms, or other subterranean prey, legs will get in the way. The serpentine or worm shape is just perfect for an underground lifestyle. With each evolutionary "mistake for the better" you are becoming ruler of the underground niche. Are there any other potential mutations that, in the long run, can serve you better for this lifestyle? Of course there are! You don't need external ear openings. Since you have become elongated, why do you need two lungs side by side? Gosh darn! San keeps getting in under your eyelids; don't need them either; an eye scale works better! And then there are the eyes.... It is very likely that retinal regression occurred in these lizard-snakes - Who needs eyes if you are in complete darkness, and you have a tongue that smells better than most animals?! In regards to the eyes, I believe that the blueprint for a functional eye may have gone dormant and then re-invented itself.

    So how do you explain going from above-ground seeing serpentine lizard to fossorial blind lizard-snake to once again above-ground seeing snake? (Remember, their are primitive blind snakes alive today!)

    Think apocalypse! We have had numerous extinction level events in Earth's amazing history (too many years for most humans to imagine - We are so small in our scope of time!). Many of these disasters (meteors, comets, super-volcanoes, mega methane burps, glaciation, global warming, etc.) may have left alive only species who were adapted to a more fossorial lifestyle. Say the earth went dark for a while; say the earth's surface was severely pummeled; maybe the underground denizens were better off. Who's to say that when the environment changed (or "got better") some of the burrowers didn't poke their heads out of some holes to smell the sunshine?!

    Uh, oh... I have to get off the computer...

    Talk to you all soon...

    Steve
    Last edited by Steven@HumboldtHerps; 07-06-2008 at 01:50 PM. Reason: okay, maybe not all are lanky!

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