نتایج جستجو برای: viperidae

تعداد نتایج: 413  

Journal: :Molecular phylogenetics and evolution 2005
R Lawson J B Slowinski B I Crother F T Burbrink

The Colubroidea contains over 85% of all the extant species of snakes and is recognized as monophyletic based on morphological and molecular data. Using DNA sequences (cyt b, c-mos) from 100 species we inferred the phylogeny of colubroids with special reference to the largest family, the Colubridae. Tree inference was obtained using Bayesian, likelihood, and parsimony methods. All analyses prod...

2014
Wilmar Bolívar-G Marta M. Antoniazzi Taran Grant Carlos Jared

The facial pits of rattlesnakes, copperheads, lanceheads, bushmasters and other American and Asian pitvipers (Crotalinae) are highly innervated and densely vascularized infrared (IR) receptor organs. For over a century, studies have focused on a small sample of model species from North America and Asia. Based on an expanded survey of Central and South American crotalines, we report a conspicuou...

Journal: :Toxicon : official journal of the International Society on Toxinology 2008
Tamás Malina László Krecsák Zoltán Korsós Zoltán Takács

Epidemiological and clinical aspects of snakebites in Hungary between 1970 and 2006 were surveyed. A total of 97 cases were recorded from 21 species, including the two native vipers, Vipera berus and Vipera ursinii, and various exotic species represented by Viperidae, Elapidae, and Colubridae. Bites by native species on laymen are uncommon (17 cases) and present trivial clinical manifestations....

Journal: :Molecular biology and evolution 2004
B G Fry W Wüster

We analyzed the origin and evolution of snake venom toxin families represented in both viperid and elapid snakes by means of phylogenetic analysis of the amino acid sequences of the toxins and related nonvenom proteins. Out of eight toxin families analyzed, five provided clear evidence of recruitment into the snake venom proteome before the diversification of the advanced snakes (Kunitz-type pr...

Journal: :Toxicon : official journal of the International Society on Toxinology 2015
Félix A Urra Rodrigo Pulgar Ricardo Gutiérrez Christian Hodar Verónica Cambiazo Antonieta Labra

Philodryas chamissonis is a rear-fanged snake endemic to Chile. Its bite produces mild to moderate symptoms with proteolytic and anti-coagulant effects. Presently, the composition of the venom, as well as, the biochemical and structural characteristics of its toxins, remains unknown. In this study, we cloned and reported the first full-length sequences of five toxin-encoding genes from the veno...

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2004
Aaron R Krochmal George S Bakken Travis J LaDuc

Pitvipers (Viperidae: Crotalinae) possess thermal radiation receptors, the facial pits, which allow them to detect modest temperature fluctuations within their environments. It was previously thought that these organs were used solely to aid in prey acquisition, but recent findings demonstrated that western diamondback rattlesnakes (Crotalus atrox) use them to direct behavioral thermoregulation...

Journal: :Sri Lanka journal of medicine 2022

Russell’s viper and hump-nosed are deadly venomous Viperidae snakes in Sri Lanka. Both these vipers widely distributed all climatic zones of the island. causes systemic envenoming such as coagulopathy, neuroparalysis acute kidney injury (AKI) whilst frequently local rarely AKI coagulopathy. These two may cause atypical syndromes like thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA) hemolytic uremic syndrome (H...

2011

Snakes that can ingest prey that are proportionally large have high metabolic rates during digestion. This great increase in metabolic rate (specific dynamic action – SDA) may create a significant augment in the animal’s body temperature. The present study investigated postprandial thermogenesis in Bothrops moojeni. Briefly, two groups of snakes were fed meals equivalent to 17 ± 3% and 32 ± 5% ...

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