This video, from the Great Barrier Reef in Australia, is called Shark Vs. Sea Snake.
From Wildlife Extra:
Identical sea snakes are 2 completely different species
Deadly sea snake has a doppelganger
November 2012. Scientists have discovered that the lethal beaked sea snake is actually two species with separate evolutions, which resulted in identical snakes. The University of Queensland’s Associate Professor Bryan Fry said the Australian and Asian beaked sea snakes were originally thought to be from the same species, however, in comparing their DNA, the research team had found these two snakes were unrelated.
Could have been a fatal mistake
“This mixup could have been medically catastrophic, since the CSL sea snake antivenom is made using the venom from the Asian snake based on the assumption that it was the same species,” Associate Professor Fry said.
“Luckily, the antivenom is not only very effective against the Australian new species but actually against all sea snakes since they all share a very stream-lined fish-specific venom.”
Convergent phenotypic evolution phenomenon
Associate Professor Fry said the finding was an example of a situation where two species evolved separately but ended up looking similar, known as the convergent phenotypic evolution phenomenon.
Associate Professor Fry said that the ‘beaked’ morphology of the species could be associated with the extremely specialised niche the snakes occupy, even though both species evolved from different ancestors and were not even close relatives. He added that the two species occupy the same specialised habitat of silt-filled shallows of tropical estuaries throughout the Asian and Australian regions.
Responsible for many deaths
These snakes are responsible for the majority of deaths and injuries to fishermen handling nets in these habitats.
New name
The Asian snake will retain the original name Enhydrina shistosa. Australian beaked sea snake has been given the scientific name [Enhydrina] zweifeli, which identifies the region in New Guinea where it is found. The new snake will be placed in a separate genus to the true Enhydrina genus in a follow up publication that will resolve the complex higher order relationships of sea snakes.
This finding was published in Molecular Phylogenetics & Evolution by Associate Professor Fry from UQ’s School of Biological Sciences and colleagues from the University of Adelaide.
Related articles
- A Remarkable Convergence of Species: The Deadliest Sea Snake [Greg Laden's Blog] (scienceblogs.com)
- DNA Test Reveals Identical Beaked Sea Snakes are Two Separate Species (natureworldnews.com)
- Drifted Apart, Crammed Together [Page 3.14] (scienceblogs.com)
- New Sea Snake Species Found in ….. Museum (sci-news.com)
- Swede in surprising museum sea snake find (thelocal.se)
- Scientists discover new spices of snake in museum (rawstory.com)
This is super interesting. And crazy up close videos of different sharks/underwater fish! I’ve been all over Netflix recently looking at documentaries, etc. What got you into all of this?
Hi Will and Megan, I have always been interested in animals ever since I was a small kid. Then, we had an aquarium at home; with goldfish and guppies; not sharks or seasnakes
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Thanks for the reblogs!
Great post. Lucky for some that the convergent evolution included the venom.
The tiger clearly demonstrated why it’s such a fearsome predator, and with all those shark species it gives me hope there is still some biodiversity left in the oceans!
Probably the video was recorded somewhere with less polution and other problems than elsewhere at the Great Barrier Reef. With more effective conservation measures, the biodiversity in the video may eventually return to elsewhere.
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Doesn’t look like that metal packet of food will digest well in that stark’s stomach :/
I agree, Chanel. Did it really eat it, or did it spit it out?
Didn’t see it spit it out in the video..hope he did though!
So do I
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