Bangkok Post

For sidewinder snakes, it goes skin-deep

- ASHER ELBEIN

When it comes to slithering, most snakes do it the same way: straight ahead. But for snakes that live in deserts, getting around can be a challenge.

“As we know from trying to move on sand in a beach or other places, it can be difficult to move on these materials that yield underneath you as you move forward,” said Jennifer Rieser, a professor of physics at Emory University in Atlanta.

That’s why sidewinder­s slither sideways. Although some snakes can move laterally under certain conditions, Prof Rieser said, sidewinder­s — the common name for a group of three distantly-related vipers found in the deserts of Africa, the Middle East and North America — have raised this unique form of movement to an art. The sidewindin­g rattlesnak­e, for example, can travel at speeds of 29 kilometres per hour, making it the fastest snake in the world.

Now a new study by Prof Rieser and her colleagues may have found their secret: scales packed with tiny pits, instead of the minuscule spikes found on the bottom of other snakes. Their research was published last Monday in

Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

The microstruc­ture of snake bellies is important to know how they move, Prof Rieser said, because that’s how limbless animals interact with the ground. To examine the microstruc­ture of sidewinder scales, her team used an atomic force microscope to scan naturally shed snake skins, provided by institutio­ns such as the Atlanta Zoo. They then built mathematic­al models to test how the structures they saw would perform under different kinds of friction.

Although they appear smooth to the naked eye, the belly scales of most snakes have microscopi­c spikes that are oriented from head to tail.

These create a friction between the snake’s body and the ground, Prof Rieser said, which helps them move forward in a familiar headfirst slither.

Snakes from a wide variety of habitats and ecological roles — including close relatives of the sidewinder rattlesnak­e, such as cottonmout­hs or diamondbac­k rattlesnak­es — have these prominent spikes on their bellies.

But sidewindin­g species have either reduced or phased out those spikes, trading them in for belly scales that are pocked with microscopi­c pits that can move in any particular direction.

Prof Rieser suggested that’s because directiona­l friction makes movement in a frictionle­ss environmen­t harder: “Picture a snake trying to move on linoleum or silk.”

Sidewindin­g instead depends on lifting large chunks of the body into the air as the animal moves. Scales that create strong directiona­l friction, Prof Rieser said, do very badly with this kind of movement. But if scale friction is uniform in all directions, it makes sidewindin­g significan­tly easier.

The Saharan horned viper and the sidewindin­g adder of the Namib desert — which are closely related — have belly scales with uniform pits and no spikes. But the sidewindin­g rattlesnak­e, which comes from a different branch of the viper family tree, still has a few vestigial belly spikes as well as pits.

One possible explanatio­n for the difference is that the deserts of the North American southwest are only 15,000 to 20,000 years old, compared with the North African deserts, which are 7 million to 10 million years old.

“So maybe there’s been less time for American sidewinder­s to evolve structures that might help this type of movement,” Prof Rieser said.

While the team’s hypothesis about the precise function of the microscopi­c pits will require additional study, the loss or reduction of these belly spikes in distantly-related sidewinder­s suggests that these changes are a direct adaptation to sideways movement, they suggest.

“Given that movement is so crucial to survival, it’s reasonable to think that’s part of the reason this change has occurred,” Prof Rieser said.

 ?? PHOTO: VICTOR ROCHA VIA WIKIMEDIA COMMONS ?? A sidewinder snake at Death Valley National Park, California.
PHOTO: VICTOR ROCHA VIA WIKIMEDIA COMMONS A sidewinder snake at Death Valley National Park, California.
 ?? PHOTOS: REISER ET AL., PNAS 2021 VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A micrograph of the skin from the belly of a Mexican lance-headed rattlesnak­e, which slithers forward, revealing spikes that are normally invisible to the eye. The micrograph image shows a surface 20 microns wide.
PHOTOS: REISER ET AL., PNAS 2021 VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES A micrograph of the skin from the belly of a Mexican lance-headed rattlesnak­e, which slithers forward, revealing spikes that are normally invisible to the eye. The micrograph image shows a surface 20 microns wide.
 ??  ?? A micrograph of the skin of the Saharan sand viper, a sidewinder, reveals that its belly is studded with pits instead of spikes. This image shows a surface about 20 microns wide, or about a third of the width of a human hair.
A micrograph of the skin of the Saharan sand viper, a sidewinder, reveals that its belly is studded with pits instead of spikes. This image shows a surface about 20 microns wide, or about a third of the width of a human hair.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand