New species of non-toxic grass snake identified in Europe

The grass snake is among the most common and widespread snakes in Europe yet relatively little is known to date about the genetic identity of these non-toxic reptiles, which can reach a length of up to one metre

Scientists have identified a new type of barred snakes, taking the number of European grass snakes species to four.

The grass snake is among the most common and widespread snakes in Europe yet relatively little is known to date about the genetic identity of these non-toxic reptiles, which can reach a length of up to one metre.

"We studied two areas where different genetic lineages of the grass snake come into contact. We discovered that the barred grass snake, previously considered a subspecies, is in fact a distinct species (Natrix helvetica)," said Uwe Fritz, Director of the Senckenberg Natural History Collections in Germany.

"The barred grass snake is widely distributed throughout Great Britain, Switzerland, Italy and France, and also occurs in the western part of Germany. Thus, the number of European snake species has increased by one," Fritz added.

Researchers examined the genetic identity of more than 1,600 grass snakes and many of them are scientific museum specimens.

"This showed once again how valuable these are. Modern methods such as genetics make it possible to gain entirely new insights from the collection specimens," Fritz said.

Two "contact zones" of grass snakes were examined closely. One of the zones is located in the Rhine region, the other extends from Central Germany down to the southern Balkans.

In these zones, different genetic lineages of the grass snake meet, which in part had previously been thought to represent different subspecies. Such contact zones are viewed as natural laboratories for evolution, since they allow the study of hybridisation and speciation, researchers said.

The two contact zones examined in this study represent different stages in the speciation process: The eastern contact zone reveals a complete mixing of the involved genetic lineages over hundreds of km, they said.

Researchers found that in the Rhine region, on the other hand, the hybrid zone is less than 50 km wide, and the admixture is very limited and unidirectional, primarily with barred grass snakes cross-breeding with Eastern Grass Snakes, but rarely the other way around.

"This indicates the presence of reproductive barriers. They arise during the speciation process to prevent mismatched pairings among different species. These reproductive barriers and the narrow hybrid zone show that the barred grass snake constitutes a distinct species" said Fritz.

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