Ádám Tisza , Attila Móré , Zoltán Turny , Attila Bereczky , Zoltán Szentesi , Zoltán Korsós , Edvárd Mizsei
{"title":"从猛禽取食遗骸中识别不完整蛇椎骨的几何形态计量学方法","authors":"Ádám Tisza , Attila Móré , Zoltán Turny , Attila Bereczky , Zoltán Szentesi , Zoltán Korsós , Edvárd Mizsei","doi":"10.1016/j.fooweb.2023.e00334","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p>The Hungarian meadow viper (<em>Vipera ursinii rakosiensis</em>) is an endangered subspecies of <em>Vipera ursinii</em>, which faces high predation pressure, partially due to avian species. To create a systematic method for estimating the measure of predation pressure, we developed a geometric morphometric approach to identify both undamaged and damaged vertebrae of snake species found in Hungarian meadow viper habitats from raptor feeding remains. We used linear discriminant analysis with a reference material of vertebrae from identified snake species as training data. We also tested its efficiency by predicting the identification results of different simulation levels based on vertebra completeness. We practiced this method on vertebrae of unknown species of snakes obtained from nests and pellets of short-toed snake eagles (<em>Circaetus gallicus</em>, <em>n</em> = 9), common buzzards (<em>Buteo buteo</em>, <em>n</em> = 14) and Montagu's harriers (<em>Circus pygargus</em>, <em>n</em> = 3). The identification approach showed high accuracy, even in the case of missing landmarks to some extent. We identified vertebrae remnants of <em>Natrix natrix</em> (<em>n</em> = 172, 83.9%), <em>Coronella austriaca</em> (<em>n</em> = 10, 4.9%) and <em>V. u. rakosiensis</em> (<em>n</em> = 23, 11.2%). Both, the reptile specialist <em>C. gallicus</em> and the generalist <em>B. buteo</em> proved to be preying on <em>V. u. rakosiensis</em>, while samples of <em>C. pygargus</em> did not contain any snake remains despite of previous observations of <em>V. ursinii</em> predations. Our approach is applicable for other studies and taxa as well, therefore can be a practical tool for classification of incomplete vertebrae, which is otherwise hardly identifiable. Furthermore, it could be applied to help estimate predation pressure on endangered snake species.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":38084,"journal":{"name":"Food Webs","volume":"38 ","pages":"Article e00334"},"PeriodicalIF":1.8000,"publicationDate":"2023-12-29","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352249623000630/pdfft?md5=e6d1f6555a433e8834f6260461c0fe3f&pid=1-s2.0-S2352249623000630-main.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"A geometric morphometric approach to identify uncomplete snake vertebrae from raptor bird feeding remains\",\"authors\":\"Ádám Tisza , Attila Móré , Zoltán Turny , Attila Bereczky , Zoltán Szentesi , Zoltán Korsós , Edvárd Mizsei\",\"doi\":\"10.1016/j.fooweb.2023.e00334\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<div><p>The Hungarian meadow viper (<em>Vipera ursinii rakosiensis</em>) is an endangered subspecies of <em>Vipera ursinii</em>, which faces high predation pressure, partially due to avian species. To create a systematic method for estimating the measure of predation pressure, we developed a geometric morphometric approach to identify both undamaged and damaged vertebrae of snake species found in Hungarian meadow viper habitats from raptor feeding remains. We used linear discriminant analysis with a reference material of vertebrae from identified snake species as training data. We also tested its efficiency by predicting the identification results of different simulation levels based on vertebra completeness. We practiced this method on vertebrae of unknown species of snakes obtained from nests and pellets of short-toed snake eagles (<em>Circaetus gallicus</em>, <em>n</em> = 9), common buzzards (<em>Buteo buteo</em>, <em>n</em> = 14) and Montagu's harriers (<em>Circus pygargus</em>, <em>n</em> = 3). The identification approach showed high accuracy, even in the case of missing landmarks to some extent. We identified vertebrae remnants of <em>Natrix natrix</em> (<em>n</em> = 172, 83.9%), <em>Coronella austriaca</em> (<em>n</em> = 10, 4.9%) and <em>V. u. rakosiensis</em> (<em>n</em> = 23, 11.2%). Both, the reptile specialist <em>C. gallicus</em> and the generalist <em>B. buteo</em> proved to be preying on <em>V. u. rakosiensis</em>, while samples of <em>C. pygargus</em> did not contain any snake remains despite of previous observations of <em>V. ursinii</em> predations. Our approach is applicable for other studies and taxa as well, therefore can be a practical tool for classification of incomplete vertebrae, which is otherwise hardly identifiable. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
匈牙利草地蝰蛇(Vipera ursinii rakosiensis)是濒临灭绝的蝰蛇亚种,面临着很大的捕食压力,部分原因是鸟类的捕食。为了建立一种系统的方法来估算捕食压力的大小,我们开发了一种几何形态计量学方法,从猛禽取食的残骸中识别匈牙利草地蝰栖息地中发现的蛇类的未损坏和已损坏椎骨。我们使用线性判别分析法,以已识别蛇类的脊椎骨为参考资料作为训练数据。我们还根据椎骨的完整性预测了不同模拟级别的识别结果,从而测试了该方法的效率。我们对从短趾蛇鹰(Circaetus gallicus,n = 9)、普通鵟(Buteo buteo,n = 14)和蒙塔格鹞(Circus pygargus,n = 3)的巢穴和骨盆中获取的未知蛇种的脊椎骨进行了实践。即使在某种程度上存在地标缺失的情况下,识别方法也显示出很高的准确性。我们识别出了 Natrix natrix(n = 172,83.9%)、Coronella austriaca(n = 10,4.9%)和 V. u. rakosiensis(n = 23,11.2%)的脊椎残余。事实证明,爬行动物专科 C. gallicus 和通科 B. buteo 都捕食了 V. u. rakosiensis,而 C. pygargus 样本中没有任何蛇的残骸,尽管以前曾观察到 V. ursinii 被捕食。我们的方法也适用于其他研究和类群,因此可以作为不完整脊椎骨分类的实用工具,否则很难识别。此外,该方法还可用于帮助估计濒危蛇类的捕食压力。
A geometric morphometric approach to identify uncomplete snake vertebrae from raptor bird feeding remains
The Hungarian meadow viper (Vipera ursinii rakosiensis) is an endangered subspecies of Vipera ursinii, which faces high predation pressure, partially due to avian species. To create a systematic method for estimating the measure of predation pressure, we developed a geometric morphometric approach to identify both undamaged and damaged vertebrae of snake species found in Hungarian meadow viper habitats from raptor feeding remains. We used linear discriminant analysis with a reference material of vertebrae from identified snake species as training data. We also tested its efficiency by predicting the identification results of different simulation levels based on vertebra completeness. We practiced this method on vertebrae of unknown species of snakes obtained from nests and pellets of short-toed snake eagles (Circaetus gallicus, n = 9), common buzzards (Buteo buteo, n = 14) and Montagu's harriers (Circus pygargus, n = 3). The identification approach showed high accuracy, even in the case of missing landmarks to some extent. We identified vertebrae remnants of Natrix natrix (n = 172, 83.9%), Coronella austriaca (n = 10, 4.9%) and V. u. rakosiensis (n = 23, 11.2%). Both, the reptile specialist C. gallicus and the generalist B. buteo proved to be preying on V. u. rakosiensis, while samples of C. pygargus did not contain any snake remains despite of previous observations of V. ursinii predations. Our approach is applicable for other studies and taxa as well, therefore can be a practical tool for classification of incomplete vertebrae, which is otherwise hardly identifiable. Furthermore, it could be applied to help estimate predation pressure on endangered snake species.