Snakes are built to evolve at incredible speeds, and scientists aren't sure why

Snakes have an evolutionary clock that ticks a lot faster than many other groups of animals, allowing them to diversify and evolve at super quick speeds, researchers have discovered.

An eyelash pitviper from the New Wold tropics.
Snakes, like this eyelash pitviper, appear to evolve very quickly, allowing them to adapt and diversify and spread across the world.
(Image credit: Alejandro Arteaga, Khamai Foundation)

Snakes have a supercharged evolutionary clock that enables them to adapt at far faster rates than other reptiles, scientists have discovered. This ability has helped them become evolutionary "winners" and spread across the planet.

"Snakes are like the Big Bang 'singularity' in cosmology — a dramatic expansion of diversity in species and their ecologies, linked to some event that might have occurred early in the evolutionary history of snakes," lead author Pascal Title, a evolutionary macroecologist at Stony Brook University in New York, said in a statement.

Hannah Osborne
Editor

Hannah Osborne is the planet Earth and animals editor at Live Science. Prior to Live Science, she worked for several years at Newsweek as the science editor. Before this she was science editor at International Business Times U.K. Hannah holds a master's in journalism from Goldsmith's, University of London.