Monday, August 4, 2008

World's Smallest Snake?


A newly named species from Barbados could be the world’s smallest kind of snake.

Adults of the new threadsnake average only 100 millimeters long (not quite 4 inches), says evolutionary biologist Blair Hedges of Pennsylvania State University in University Park.

Hedges is naming it Leptotyphlops carlae in honor of his wife, Carla Ann Hass, he says in the formal description published online in Zootaxa.

The snake’s eye-to-tail stripes, narrow head, scale pattern and some of its DNA segments mark it as a species new to science, Hedges says.
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He says the Barbados snake also fits another pattern: Islands are often homes for very large or very small species. Some lineages on continents never make it out to islands, so island dwellers have opportunities to fill niches they wouldn’t on the mainland. Hence, when searching for an unusual form of an animal, such as minis or giants, islands make good places to start looking.

Over his career, Hedges has codescribed other extreme herps: A frog smaller than a dime and the smallest known lizard. Each came from an island.

3 comments:

I LOVE PUPPIES!!!!! (guess who I am) said...

Cute lizard thingamabob! So small!
i luv puppies

I LOVE PUPPIES!!!!! (guess who I am) said...

Cute lizard thingamabob! So small!
i luv puppies

I LOVE PUPPIES!!!!! (guess who I am) said...

oops i posted it twice