Greenbaum Eli, Galeva Nadezhda, Jorgensen Michael
Division of Herpetology, Natural History Museum & Biodiversity Research Center, and Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, 1345 Jayhawk Boulevard, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045-7561, USA.
J Chem Ecol. 2003 Aug;29(8):1741-55. doi: 10.1023/a:1024837908894.
Previous studies of chemoreceptive behavior in vipers suggest that snakes focus on the scent of envenomated tissue to track their prey following envenomation. Other studies have indicated a correlation between qualitative differences in venom biochemistry and geographic variation in diet. The North American copperhead (Agkistrodon contortrix) varies geographically in diet and venom biochemistry; snakes were collected from three populations (Kansas, Texas, and Louisiana) that are known to have different prey preferences. Behavioral experiments were conducted to assess whether copperheads preferred envenomated prey more than nonenvenomated prey, as do other species of vipers studied thus far. Additional experiments tested the ability of copperheads to distinguish between envenomated prey from different geographic populations, and between geographic populations of copperheads and two other species of viper. Results indicated that copperheads prefer envenomated prey to nonenvenomated prey. In envenomated-prey discrimination experiments, copperheads distinguished between envenomated prey from different geographic populations, and some snakes distinguished envenomated prey of A. contortrix from those of A. piscivorns and Sistrurus catenatus. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) was used to study the variation of venom biochemistry in this species and two other taxa (A. piscivorus and S. catenatus), and confirmed intraspecific and interspecific variation of venom proteins. Relative potency of the venom from different populations as indicated by time to immobilization experiments was in the order: Louisiana > Texas > Kansas. The relative potency of the venom from each population matched the order of preference in the chemoreception experiments. These results suggest that chemoreception is sensitive to subtle differences in venom biochemistry and may reflect adaptation to improve efficiency of finding envenomated prey.
以往对蝰蛇化学感受行为的研究表明,蛇在注入毒液后会专注于中毒组织的气味来追踪猎物。其他研究表明毒液生化性质的质的差异与饮食的地理差异之间存在关联。北美铜头蝮蛇(Agkistrodon contortrix)在饮食和毒液生化性质方面存在地理差异;从已知有不同猎物偏好的三个种群(堪萨斯州、得克萨斯州和路易斯安那州)采集了蛇。进行了行为实验,以评估铜头蝮蛇是否像迄今为止研究的其他蝰蛇物种一样,更喜欢中毒猎物而非未中毒猎物。额外的实验测试了铜头蝮蛇区分不同地理种群的中毒猎物,以及区分铜头蝮蛇不同地理种群与其他两种蝰蛇的能力。结果表明,铜头蝮蛇更喜欢中毒猎物而非未中毒猎物。在中毒猎物辨别实验中,铜头蝮蛇能区分不同地理种群的中毒猎物,一些蛇能区分铜头蝮蛇的中毒猎物与食鱼蝮蛇(A. piscivorus)和链带锦蛇(Sistrurus catenatus)的中毒猎物。使用十二烷基硫酸钠-聚丙烯酰胺凝胶电泳(SDS-PAGE)研究了该物种以及其他两个分类群(食鱼蝮蛇和链带锦蛇)毒液生化性质的变化,并证实了毒液蛋白的种内和种间差异。固定时间实验表明,不同种群毒液的相对效力顺序为:路易斯安那州>得克萨斯州>堪萨斯州。每个种群毒液的相对效力与化学感受实验中的偏好顺序相符。这些结果表明,化学感受对毒液生化性质的细微差异敏感,可能反映了为提高发现中毒猎物的效率而产生的适应性变化。