Futurity

How do sea snakes in salt water get a drink?

When researchers found that sea snakes need freshwater, a new mystery emerged: How do they find it?
sea snake

New research solves the mystery of how sea snakes, who live surrounded by salty ocean water, stay hydrated.

Previously, scientists thought that sea snakes were able to drink seawater, but recent research has shown that they need to access freshwater.

The new study, which appears in PLOS ONE, shows that sea snakes living where there is drought relieve their dehydration as soon as the wet season hits. To do this, they get freshwater from “lenses” that form on the surface of the ocean during heavy rain—when the salinity at the surface decreases enough for the water to be drinkable.

The yellow-bellied sea snake (Hydrophis platurus) is the only reptile in the order Squamata that lives on the open sea. It has one of the largest geographic ranges of any vertebrate species.

Given its broad range and seafaring existence, during the dry season (six to seven months at the study site in Costa Rica) it has no access to freshwater. How sea snakes survive in regions of drought seems to hinge upon access to freshwater lenses, but little is known about how marine vertebrates react to or consume rainfall.

“This study contributes to a fuller understanding of how pelagic sea snakes, and possibly other marine animals, avoid desiccation following seasonal drought at sea,” says Harvey Lillywhite, professor of biology of the University of Florida.

The researchers captured 99 sea snakes off the coast of Costa Rica (interestingly, the snakes have never been observed in estuaries) and offered them freshwater in a laboratory environment. The researchers happened to be there just as six months of drought broke and the rainy season began. They found that only 13 percent of snakes captured after the rainfall began accepted the offer, compared to 80 percent of those captured before. The rainfall must have quenched their thirst.

“How these animals locate and harvest precipitation is important in view of the recent declines and extinctions of some species of sea snakes,” says Lillywhite. The question remains: How will climate change and its effects on precipitation impact the sea snakes?

Additional coauthors are from the University of Florida and the Florida Museum of Natural History.

Source: University of Florida

The post How do sea snakes in salt water get a drink? appeared first on Futurity.

More from Futurity

Futurity3 min read
How Can Physics Become More Diverse?
A new paper explores the problems with physics culture and provides a road map for making departments in the field more equitable. Physics has long suffered from the perception that the most cutting-edge work is done by lone geniuses, usually white m
Futurity1 min read
How You Can Reverse Insulin Resistance
What is insulin resistance and how can you reverse it? An expert has answers for you. Gerald I. Shulman, a professor of medicine (endocrinology) and cellular and molecular physiology, investigator emeritus of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and
Futurity3 min read
Team Pins Down Huge Cost Of Mental Illness In The US
A new analysis of the economic toll of mental illness considers a host of adverse economic outcomes not considered in earlier estimates. Mental illness costs the US economy $282 billion annually, which is equivalent to the average economic recession,

Related Books & Audiobooks