1. How anatomy influences measurements of snakes.
- Author
-
Cundall D, Deufel A, and Pattishall A
- Subjects
- Animals, Head anatomy & histology, Joints anatomy & histology, Joints diagnostic imaging, Body Size, Snakes anatomy & histology
- Abstract
Anatomy compromises the precision and accuracy of measurements made of the body length and head size of live snakes. Body measures (snout-vent length, SVL) incorporate many synovial intervertebral joints, each allowing flexion and limited extension and compression. Radiographs of the trunk in 14 phylogenetically diverse species in resting and stretched conditions combined with dissections and histological analysis of intervertebral joints show that the synovial nature of these joints underlies the variance in SVL measures. Similarly, the ubiquity and variety of viscoelastic tissues connecting mobile snout and jaw elements of alethinophidian snakes underlie variances in length and width measures of the head. For the overall size of the head and jaw apparatus, the part that can be most easily and relatively precisely measured for many snakes is the mandible because it has only one mobile joint. As to accuracy, the anatomy of intervertebral and cranial joints supports the hypothesis that in living snakes, the head and trunk have no exact size., (© 2024 The Author(s). Journal of Morphology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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