(Press-News.org) Media Contact:
John Dudley
(814) 490-3290 (cell)
jjdudley@usf.edu
Click here for images, captions and a PDF of the journal article
What rattlesnake venom can teach us about evolution
USF researchers find that island snakes adapt their venom in surprising ways, offering new clues about how animals evolve in changing environments
TAMPA, Fla. (Embrgoed for publication until April 23, 2025) – Researchers at the University of South Florida are uncovering new clues about how animals evolve by studying rattlesnake venom — and what they’ve found could help us better protect wildlife in a world increasingly shaped by human activity.
In their latest study, published in Evolution, they found that some rattlesnakes are producing simpler venoms containing fewer and more focused toxin families than complex venoms -- a surprising discovery that challenges long-held ideas about how living alongside a variety of other species influences evolution.
Mark Margres, assistant professor in the department of integrative biology, and doctoral student Samuel Hirst explored 11 uninhabited islands in the Gulf of California – pitching tents along the beach and exploring with head lamps after the sunset and the islands cooled enough for the snakes to come out. With help from scientists in Mexico and California, the team collected venom from 83 rattlesnakes — some stretching up to four feet long — to study how the makeup of their venom reflects what they eat and how they survive in the wild.
“The Baja California islands are pristine and largely untouched by human activity, making them an extraordinary place to study evolutionary processes in isolation,” Hirst said. “We initially hypothesized that larger islands, which support greater biodiversity and prey diversity, would be associated with more complex venoms, which are better suited for more diverse prey. However, we found the opposite pattern.
This unexpected result suggests that factors such as competition or ecological specialization may be at play, opening exciting avenues for future research.”
The study found that on islands with more space and more competition, rattlesnake venom became more specialized. As animals adapt to reduce competition, rattlesnakes may evolve venom that’s finely tuned to specific prey. This challenges long-standing ideas about evolution and offers fresh insight into how species and their traits adapt in fragmented environments.
"Habitat fragmentation is like breaking apart a completed puzzle. A healthy, intact ecosystem is like a 1,000-piece puzzle where every piece is in place — you can clearly see the full picture,” Margres said. “But when you start fragmenting it, pieces go missing or get rearranged, and the image becomes distorted. That distortion represents the disruption of ecosystem function."
This research offers a rare, measurable example of the effects of rapid changes in biodiversity — the variety of all living things in a particular area, including animals, plants, insects and even microscopic organisms. These changes, often driven by human activity, can affect not just which species live in an area, but how their bodies work on a molecular level. Because venom plays a key role in survival, hunting and reproduction, it’s a valuable tool for studying broader evolutionary trends.
“This isn’t just about rattlesnakes -- it’s about understanding the fundamental ways life evolves when isolation and biodiversity start to shift,” said Margres, who also studies rattlesnakes on coastal islands in the eastern U.S., including Honeymoon and Caladesi in Tampa Bay.
The study has provided an extensive amount of data, allowing Margres and Hirst to continue their research and further explore how island systems can inform habitat fragmentation and its effects on genetic diversity. They’re also working to test how well current Mexican antivenoms neutralize the unique venoms found on these islands -- a necessary step toward making sure that if someone is bitten, local hospitals have the correct antivenom to treat them effectively.
“Right now, we don’t know how well existing antivenoms work against these island venoms — but our research is helping to change that,” Margres said.
This study was funded and supported by the National Geographic Society and done in collaboration with the support of Mexico’s Secretaría de Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales (SEMARNAT) and Comisión Nacional de Áreas Naturales Protegidas (CONANP), whose conservation efforts protect these ecologically significant islands.
###
About the University of South Florida
The University of South Florida, a high-impact research university dedicated to student success and committed to community engagement, generates an annual economic impact of more than $6 billion. Across campuses in Tampa, St. Petersburg, Sarasota-Manatee and USF Health, USF serves approximately 50,000 students who represent nearly 150 different countries. U.S. News & World Report has ranked USF as one of the nation’s top 50 public universities for six consecutive years and, for the second straight year, as the best value university in Florida. In 2023, USF became the first public university in Florida in nearly 40 years to be invited to join the Association of American Universities, a group of the leading 3% of universities in the United States and Canada. With an all-time high of $738 million in research funding in 2024 and a ranking as a top 20 public university for producing new U.S. patents, USF is a leader in solving global problems and improving lives. USF is a member of the American Athletic Conference. Learn more at www.usf.edu.
END
In 2021, research led by Ryan Flynn, MD, PhD, and his mentor, Nobel laureate Carolyn Bertozzi, PhD, opened a new chapter in biology, characterizing a new kind of player on the cell surface: glycoRNAs. Extending this discovery recently in Cell, Flynn and colleagues showed that glycoRNAs form highly organized clusters with RNA-binding proteins on the cell surface. These clusters appear to regulate communication between cells and their environment.
Now, reporting in Nature Biotechnology, Flynn’s team in the Stem Cell Program at Boston Children’s Hospital and Dana-Farber/Boston Children's ...
In metamaterials design, the name of the game has long been “stronger is better.”
Metamaterials are synthetic materials with microscopic structures that give the overall material exceptional properties. A huge focus has been in designing metamaterials that are stronger and stiffer than their conventional counterparts. But there’s a trade-off: The stiffer a material, the less flexible it is.
MIT engineers have now found a way to fabricate a metamaterial that is both strong and stretchy. The base material is typically highly rigid and brittle, but it is printed ...
A bacteria killing coating created by scientists has been used in trials of a new paint that can be applied to a range of surfaces to effectively kill bacteria and viruses, including difficult to kill species such as MRSA, flu and COVID-19.
Scientists at the University of Nottingham’s School of Pharmacy have trialled a new paint-on resin product that incorporates bacteria killing chlorhexidine, which is often used by dentists to treat mouth infections and for pre-surgical cleaning.
The team have worked with Indestructible Paint to create a prototype antimicrobial paint using this new material and have found it effectively activates when dried ...
Kyoto, Japan -- Smartphones may often feel like a source of stress, feeding us an endless stream of bad news and social comparison. But what if they could also be the solution?
A team of researchers from Kyoto University believes they can be. The team has developed a smartphone app that delivers core techniques of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT)—a proven treatment for depression and anxiety—straight into the hands of users, and tested it in the largest-ever individually randomized trial of its kind.
Their ...
The Report: Contrary to common perceptions, the peak in global anti-Jewish hatred was immediately after the October 7 attack, and not as the war progressed.
A particularly alarming rise was recorded in Australia. Increases were also observed in the United States, Italy, Spain, Canada, Argentina, and Brazil.
According to the Report, only a negligible percentage of complaints regarding antisemitic hate crimes have led to arrests and indictments; “Education and legislation without enforcement are meaningless”.
On the eve of Holocaust Remembrance Day, the Center for the Study of Contemporary European Jewry and the Irwin Cotler Institute for Democracy, Human Rights ...
Current AI Risks More Alarming than Apocalyptic Future Scenarios
Most people generally are more concerned about the immediate risks of artificial intelligence than they are about a theoretical future in which AI threatens humanity. A new study by the University of Zurich reveals that respondents draw clear distinctions between abstract scenarios and specific tangible problems and particularly take the latter very seriously.
There is a broad consensus that artificial intelligence is associated with risks, but ...
Addressing the challenges of fragrance design, researchers at Institute of Science Tokyo (Science Tokyo) have developed an AI model that can automate the creation of new fragrances based on user-defined scent descriptors. The model uses mass spectrometry profiles of essential oils and corresponding odor descriptors to generate essential oil blends for new scents. This breakthrough is a game-changer for the fragrance industry, moving beyond trial-and-error, enabling rapid and scalable fragrance production.
Designing new fragrances is crucial ...
People with Alzheimer’s disease may retain their ability to empathise, despite declines in other social abilities, finds a new study led by University College London (UCL) researchers.
The researchers found that people with Alzheimer’s disease scored slightly higher on a measure of empathy than peers of the same age with mild cognitive impairment, despite scoring worse on other measures of social cognition such as recognising facial emotions and understanding the thoughts of others.
The authors of the study, published in Alzheimer’s & Dementia ...
Primal world beliefs (“primals”) capture understanding of general characteristics of the world, such as whether the world is “Good,” “Safe,” and “Enticing.” In a new study, researchers analyzed responses from children, mothers, fathers and then later, young adults in Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States to learn about their world beliefs.
Through a larger project called Parenting Across Cultures, children ages 8-16 years old (50% female) and their mothers and fathers, reported responses about neighborhood danger, socioeconomic status, parental ...
Research published in the Journal of Management Studies provides new insights on how parental leave policies, involving their time and money components, might affect whether mothers start a new business.
Contrary to the common belief that generous parental leave discourages entrepreneurship, the study finds that offering more time off through parental leave can promote mothers’ entrepreneurship.
In two complementary studies, the researchers found that the duration of parental leave—yet not the amount of money paid—seems to shape mothers’ entrepreneurial activity. ...