出典(authority):フリー百科事典『ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』「2014/12/03 04:43:47」(JST)
Coral Reef Snake | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Subphylum: | Vertebrata |
Class: | Reptilia |
Order: | Squamata |
Suborder: | Serpentes |
Family: | Elapidae |
Subfamily: | Hydrophiinae Smith, 1926 |
range of sea snakes shown in lime green |
The Hydrophiinae, also known as coral reef snakes or sea snakes, are a subfamily of venomous elapid snakes that inhabit marine environments for most or all of their lives. Though they evolved from terrestrial ancestors, most are extensively adapted to a fully aquatic life and are unable to move on land, except for the genus Laticauda, which retain ancestral characteristics, allowing limited land movement. They are found in warm coastal waters from the Indian Ocean to the Pacific and are closely related to venomous terrestrial snakes in Australia.[1]
All have paddle-like tails and many have laterally compressed bodies that give them an eel-like appearance. Unlike fish, they do not have gills and must surface regularly to breathe. They are among the most completely aquatic of all air-breathing vertebrates.[2] Among this group are species with some of the most potent venoms of all snakes. Some have gentle dispositions and bite only when provoked, but others are much more aggressive. Currently, 17 genera are described as sea snakes, comprising 62 species.[3][4]
The majority of adult Hydrophiinae species grow to between 120 and 150 cm (3.9 and 4.9 ft) in length,[5] with the largest, Hydrophis spiralis, reaching a maximum of 3 m (9.8 ft).[6] Their eyes are relatively small with a round pupil[7] and most have nostrils that are located dorsally.[8] The skulls do not differ significantly from terrestrial elapids, although the dentition is relatively primitive with short fangs and (with the exception of Emydocephalus) as many as 18 smaller teeth behind them on the maxilla.[2]
Most Hydrophiinae are completely aquatic and have adapted to their environments in many ways, the most characteristic of which is a paddle-like tail that has increased their swimming ability.[9] To a varying degree, the bodies of many species are laterally compressed, especially in the pelagic species. This has often caused the ventral scales to become reduced in size, even difficult to distinguish from the adjoining scales. Their lack of ventral scales means they have become virtually helpless on land, but as they live out their entire life cycles at sea, they have no need to leave the water.[5][8]
The only genus that has retained the enlarged ventral scales is the sea kraits, Laticauda, with only five species. These snakes are considered to be more primitive, as they still spend much of their time on land, where their ventral scales afford them the necessary grip.[5][8] Laticauda species are also the only sea snakes with internasal scales, i.e., their nostrils are not located dorsally.[9]
Since it is easier for a snake's tongue to fulfill its olfactory function under water, its action is short compared to that of terrestrial snake species. Only the forked tips protrude from the mouth through a divided notch in the middle of the rostral scale.[2] The nostrils have valves consisting of a specialized spongy tissue to exclude water, and the windpipe can be drawn up to where the short nasal passage opens into the roof of the mouth. This is an important adaptation for an animal that must surface to breathe, but may have its head partially submerged when doing so. The lung has become very large and extends almost the entire length of the body, although the rear portion is thought to have developed to aid buoyancy rather than to exchange gases. The extended lung possibly also serves to store air for dives.[5][8]
Most species of Hydrophiinae are able to respire through the top of their skin. This is unusual for reptiles, because their skin is thick and scaly, but experiments with the black-and-yellow sea snake, Pelamis platurus (a pelagic species), have shown this species can satisfy about 25% of its oxygen requirements in this manner, which allows for prolonged dives.[10]
Like other land animals that have adapted to life in a marine environment, sea snakes ingest considerably more salt than their terrestrial relatives through their diets, and when seawater is inadvertently swallowed. This meant they had to evolve a more effective means of regulating the salt concentration of their blood. In sea snakes, the posterior sub lingual glands, located under and around the tongue sheath, evolved to allow them to expel salt with their tongue action.[2][8]
Scalation among sea snakes is highly variable. As opposed to terrestrial snake species that have imbricate scales to protect against abrasion, the scales of most pelagic sea snakes do not overlap. Reef-dwelling species, such as Aipysurus, do have imbricate scales to protect against the sharp coral. The scales themselves may be smooth, keeled, spiny or granular, the latter often looking like warts. Pelamis has body scales that are "peg-like", while those on its tail are juxtaposed hexagonal plates.[8]
Aipysurus laevis has been found to have photoreceptors in the skin of its tail, allowing it to detect light and presumably ensuring it is completely hidden, including its tail, inside coral holes during the day. While other species have not been tested, A. laevis possibly is not unique among sea snakes in this respect.[11]
Hydrophiinae are mostly confined to the warm tropical waters of the Indian Ocean and the western Pacific Ocean,[5] with a few species found well out into Oceania.[12] The geographic range of one species, Pelamis platurus, is wider than that of any other reptile species, except for a few species of sea turtles.[2] It extends from the east coast of Africa, from Djibouti in the north to Cape Town in the south,[13] across the Indian Ocean, the Pacific, south as far as the northern coast of New Zealand,[12][14] all the way to the western coast of the Americas, where it occurs from northern Peru in the south (including the Galápagos Islands) to the Gulf of California in the north. Isolated specimens have been found as far north as San Clemente in the United States.[10]
Sea snakes do not occur in the Atlantic Ocean[citation needed]. It is thought that Pelamis would be found there were it not for the cold currents off Namibia and western South Africa that keep it from crossing into the eastern South Atlantic, or south of 5° latitude along the South American west coast. Sea snakes do not occur in the Red Sea, believed to be due to its increased salinity, so there is no danger of them crossing through the Suez Canal. Salinity, or rather a lack thereof, is also thought to be the reason why Pelamis has not crossed into the Caribbean via the Panama Canal.[2]
Despite their marine adaptations, most sea snakes prefer shallow waters near land, around islands, and especially somewhat sheltered waters, as well as near estuaries.[5][9] They may swim up rivers and have been reported as far as 160 km (99 mi) from the sea.[9] Others, such as Pelamis platurus, are pelagic and are found in drift lines, slicks of floating debris brought together by surface currents.[15] Some sea snakes inhabit mangrove swamps and similar brackish water habitats, and two landlocked fresh water forms are found: Hydrophis semperi occurs in Lake Taal in the Philippines, and Laticauda crockeri in Lake Te Nggano on Rennell Island in the Solomon Islands.[8]
Sea snakes are generally reluctant to bite,[5][6] and are usually considered to be mild-tempered, although there is variation among species and individuals.[12] Some species, such as Pelamis platurus, which feed by simply gulping down their prey, are more likely to bite when provoked because they seem to use their venom more for defense. Others, such as Laticauda, use their venom for prey immobilization; these snakes are often handled without concern by local fishermen, who unravel and toss them back into the water barehanded when the snakes become entangled in fishing nets.[5][8] Species reported as much more aggressive include Aipysurus laevis, Astrotia stokesii, Enhydrina schistosa, Enhydrina zweifeli and Hydrophis ornatus.[9]
On land, their movements become very erratic. They crawl awkwardly in these situations and can become quite aggressive, striking wildly at anything that moves, although they are unable to coil and strike in the manner of terrestrial snakes.[6][7]
Sea snakes appear to be active both day and night. In the morning, and sometimes late in the afternoon, they can be seen at the surface basking in the sunlight, and they will dive when disturbed.[5] They have been reported swimming at depths of over 90 m (300 ft), and can remain submerged for as long as a few hours, possibly depending on temperature and degree of activity.[6][12]
Sea snakes have been sighted in huge numbers. For example, in 1932, a steamer in the Strait of Malacca, off the coast of Malaysia, reported sighting "millions" of Astrotia stokesii, a relative of Pelamis; these reportedly formed a line of snakes 3 m (9.8 ft) wide and 100 km (62 mi) long.[15] The cause of this phenomenon is unknown, although it likely has to do with reproduction.[2] They can sometimes be seen swimming in schools of several dozen, and many dead specimens have been found on beaches after typhoons.[7]
They feed on small fish and occasionally young octopuses.
Except for a single genus, all Hydrophiinae species are ovoviviparous; the young are born alive in the water where they live their entire lives.[8] In some species, the young are quite large: up to half as long as the mother.[6] The one exception is the genus Laticauda, which is oviparous; its five species all lay their eggs on land.[8]
Like their cousins in the Elapidae family, the majority of Hydrophiinae species are highly venomous; however, when bites occur, it is rare for much venom to be injected, so envenomation symptoms usually seem nonexistent or trivial.[9] For example, Pelamis platurus has a venom more potent than any terrestrial snake species in Costa Rica based on LD50, but despite its abundance in the waters off its western coast, few human fatalities have been reported.[10] Nevertheless, all sea snakes should be handled with great caution.[9]
Bites in which envenomation does occur are usually painless and may not even be noticed when contact is made. Teeth may remain in the wound. There is usually little or no swelling, and it is rare for any nearby lymph nodes to be affected. The most important symptoms are rhabdomyolysis (rapid breakdown of skeletal muscle tissue) and paralysis. Early symptoms include headache, a thick-feeling tongue, thirst, sweating, and vomiting. Symptoms that can occur after 30 minutes to several hours after the bite include generalized aching, stiffness, and tenderness of muscles all over the body. Passive stretching of the muscles is also painful, and trismus, which is similar to tetanus, is common. This is followed later on by symptoms typical of other elapid envenomations: a progressive flaccid paralysis, starting with ptosis and paralysis of voluntary muscles. Paralysis of muscles involved in swallowing and respiration can be fatal. After 3–8 h, myoglobin, as a result of muscle breakdown, may start to show up in the blood plasma, which can cause the urine to turn a dark reddish, brown, or black color, and eventually lead to acute renal failure. After 6-12 h, severe hyperkalemia, also the result of muscle breakdown, can lead to cardiac arrest.[16]
Sea snakes were at first regarded as a unified and separate family, the Hydrophiidae, that later came to comprise two subfamilies: the Hydrophiinae, or true/aquatic sea snakes (now 16 genera with 57 species), and the more primitive Laticaudinae, or sea kraits (one genus, Laticauda, with five species). Eventually, as it became clear just how closely related the sea snakes are to the elapids, the taxonomic situation became less well-defined. Some taxonomists responded by moving the sea snakes to the Elapidae, thereby creating the subfamilies Elapinae, Hydrophiinae and Laticaudinae, although the latter may be omitted if Laticauda is included in the Hydrophiinae. No one has yet been able to convincingly work out the phylogenetic relationships between the various elapid subgroups, and the situation is still unclear. Therefore, others opted to either continue to work with the older traditional arrangements, if only for practical reasons, or to lump all of the genera together in the Elapidae, with no taxonomic subdivisions, to reflect the work that remains to be done.[3][4][7][8]
Genus[3][4] | Taxon authority[3] | Species[3] | Subsp.*[3] | Common name[4] | Geographic range[4] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Acalyptophis | Boulenger, 1895 | 1 | 0 | spiny-headed sea snake or horned sea snake | Gulf of Thailand, South China Sea, the Strait of Taiwan, and the coasts of Guangdong, Indonesia, the Philippines, New Guinea, New Caledonia, Australia (Northern Territory, Queensland, Western Australia) |
Aipysurus | Lacépède, 1804 | 7 | 1 | olive sea snakes | Timor Sea, South China Sea, Gulf of Thailand, and coasts of Australia (Northern Territory, Queensland, West Australia), New Caledonia, Loyalty Islands, southern New Guinea, Indonesia, western Malaysia and Vietnam |
Astrotia | Fischer, 1855 | 1 | 0 | Stokes' sea snake | coastal areas from west India and Sri Lanka through Gulf of Thailand to South China Sea, west Malaysia, Indonesia, east to New Guinea, north and east coasts of Australia, the Philippines |
Emydocephalus | Krefft, 1869 | 2 | 0 | turtlehead sea snakes | the coasts of Timor (Indonesian Sea), New Caledonia, Australia (Northern Territory, Queensland, West Australia), and in the Southeast Asian sea along the coasts of China, Taiwan, Japan, and the Ryukyu Islands |
Enhydrina (Enhydrina schistosa & Enhydrina zweifeli) | Gray, 1849 | 2 | 0 | beaked sea snakes | in the Persian Gulf (Oman, United Arab Emirates, etc.), south to the Seychelles and Madagascar,
Southeast Asia (Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam), Australia (Northern Territory, Queensland), New Guinea and Papua New Guinea |
Ephalophis | M.A. Smith, 1931 | 1 | 0 | Grey's mudsnake | northwestern Australia |
Hydrelaps | Boulenger, 1896 | 1 | 0 | Port Darwin mudsnake | northern Australia, southern New Guinea |
Hydrophis | Latreille in Sonnini & Latreille, 1801 | 34 | 3 | sea snakes | Indo-Australian and Southeast Asian waters.[17] |
Kerilia | Gray, 1849 | 1 | 0 | Jerdon's sea snake | Southeast Asian waters[17] |
Kolpophis | M.A. Smith, 1926 | 1 | 0 | bighead sea snake | Indian Ocean[17] |
Lapemis | Gray, 1835 | 2 | 0 | spine-bellied sea snake, Shaw's sea snake | Persian Gulf to Indian Ocean, South China Sea, Indo-Australian Archipelago and the western Pacific[17] |
Laticauda | Laurenti, 1768 | 5 | 0 | sea kraits | Southeast Asian and Indo-Australian waters |
Parahydrophis | Burger & Natsuno, 1974 | 1 | 0 | northern mangrove sea snake | northern Australia, southern New Guinea |
Parapistocalamus | Roux, 1934 | 1 | 0 | Hediger's snake | Bougainville Island, Solomons |
Pelamis | Daudin, 1803 | 1 | 0 | yellow-bellied sea snake | Indian and Pacific Oceans |
Praescutata | Wall, 1921 | 1 | 0 | from the Persian Gulf to the Indian Ocean, the South China Sea, and northeast to the coastal region of Fujian and Strait of Taiwan | |
Thalassophis | P. Schmidt, 1852 | 1 | 0 | anomalous sea snake | South China Sea (Malaysia, Gulf of Thailand), Indian Ocean (Sumatra, Java, Borneo) |
*) Not including the nominate subspecies
Molecular data studies suggest all three monotypic semiaquatic genera (Ephalophis, Parahydrophis and Hydrelaps) are early diverging lineages.[18] The Aipysurus group is monophyletic: the egg-eating specialists form separate, early-diverging lineages. The Hydrophiini last shared a common ancestor about 6 million years ago ago with the majority of extant lineages diversified over the last 3.5 million years ago. The Hydrophis group shared a last common ancestor about 1.5 million years ago-3 million years ago.
At best, Hydrophiinae make difficult captives. Ditmars (1933) described them as nervous and delicate captives that usually refuse to eat, preferring only to hide in the darkest corner of the tank.[7] Over 50 years later, Mehrtens (1987) wrote, although they were rarely displayed in western zoological parks, some species were regularly on display in Japanese aquariums. Available food supply limits the number of species that can be kept in captivity, since some have diets that are too specialized. Also, some species appear intolerant of handling, or even being removed from the water. Regarding their requirements in captivity, the Laticauda species need to be able to exit the water somewhere at about 29 °C, along with a submerged shelter. Species that have done relatively well in captivity include the ringed sea snake, Hydrophis cyanocinctus, which feeds on fish and eels in particular. Pelamis platurus has done especially well in captivity, accepting small fish, including goldfish. However, care has to be taken to house them in round or oval tanks, or in rectangular tanks with corners that are well-rounded, to prevent the snakes from damaging their snouts by swimming into the sides.[8]
Most sea snakes are not on the CITES protection lists,[9][19] however, one species, Laticauda crockeri, is classified as vulnerable, another, Aipysurus fuscus, classified as endangered, and two, Aipysurus foliosquama and Aipysurus apraefrontalis, are classified as critically endangered according to the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.[20]
Sea snakes are true reptiles closely related to Australian venomous terrestrial snakes. Indeed, both groups are included in a single subfamily, Hydrophiinae, by most modern herpetologists.
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リンク元 | 「Hydrophidae」「ウミヘビ」 |
関連記事 | 「snake」「sea」 |
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