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Screech Owls and Blindsnakes: An Unlikely Mutualism

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Adult Eastern Screech Owl at a nest box
In the 1970s and 80s, a pair of biologists at Baylor University in Waco, Texas, Fred Gehlbach and Robert Baldridge, were studying screech owl nesting ecology. These small owls nest in tree cavities and eat a variety of small animals, from insects to mice. Like most raptorial birds, Eastern Screech Owls usually kill their prey before bringing it home to feed to their nestlings. Gehlbach and Baldridge observed some of the screech owls in their study carrying live Texas Blindsnakes (Rena [formerly Leptotyphlops] dulcis) to their nests in experimental nest boxes like those used by wood ducks and bluebirds (pictured at right). When they checked the nests the next day, they found, to their surprise, between one and fifteen live blindsnakes living among the owl chicks in fourteen different nests! In some cases, the snakes lived with the baby owls for at least a week! Many of the blindsnakes bore scars from adult owl beaks, but few had been killed.

If you're not familiar with blindsnakes (aka scolecophidians), don't worry; few people are. There are about 400 species of these 'seriously strange serpents', as Darren Naish calls them over at TetZoo, distributed chiefly in the world's tropical regions (the Texas Blindsnake is one of the few temperate exceptions). Most have small eyes (or none at all, as their name suggests), smooth round scales, and eat invertebrates. Their jaw architecture is entirely unique: their jaws act like little scoops to effectively shovel ant and termite larvae and pupae into their mouths. Check out the video from BBC's Life in Cold Blood below, or visit the homepage of blindsnake biologist Nate Kley at Stony Brook University.


Almost as cute as baby snakes
How does this help baby screech owls? Gehlbach and Baldridge wanted to find out, so they measured the diversity and abundance of invertebrates in the owl nests with and without live blindsnakes, as well as the health and survival of the baby owls (which they were already measuring). They found that nests with blindsnakes had significantly fewer mites, insects, and arachnids, and that baby owls from these nests were 25% more likely to survive and grew as much as 50% faster; in other words, the presence of the blindsnakes improved the health of the baby owls and the fitness of the adults. The effects were more pronounced for the youngest owl babies, which hatch as many as six days later than their oldest sibling. As the nail in the coffin, Gehlbach and Baldridge tested whether or not the blindsnakes actually ate the invertebrates they found in the owl nests, and sure enough, they chowed down on the soft-bodied fly larvae that kill baby owls in nearly 30% of nests.

Texas Blindsnake (Rena dulcis)
They also noticed that blindsnakes were more likely to be found in nests after it rained, probably because the mother owls had an easier time of finding the blindsnakes when they were crawling around on the surface, which many fossorial snakes tend to do when rainwater fills their burrows. Gehlbach and Baldridge also found that blindsnakes could only survive about two weeks in owl nest boxes that did not contain baby owls, suggesting that they were dependent on insect larvae that entered the nest inside food brought by the mother owl. These snakes can climb trees, so presumably it isn't too challenging for them to climb down out of a nest box after it is vacated by owls; one gravid female blindsnake was found in a nest box, so it is possible that they lay their eggs there before leaving. Some nests contained dead blindsnakes, which Gehlbach and Baldridge hypothesized had been eaten by the baby owls after their food supply had run out. In feeding experiments, baby screech owls readily consumed dead blindsnakes as well as other snakes of similar size, such as Rough Earthsnakes (Virginia striatula).

Skull architecture of Rena dulcis
The skulls of blindsnakes are just amazing, and it's thanks to the research efforts of blindsnake anatomist Nate Kley of Stony Brook University that we know so much about them. Kley has characterized the feeding behavior of two families of blindsnakes, the Leptotyphlopidae, which use  scooping motions of the lower jaw known as mandibular raking, and the Typhlopidae, which use similar motions of the upper jaws, called maxillary raking. It's remarkable how similar the two strategies are given that the snakes are using entirely different parts of their bodies to employ them and that they are separated by about 110 million years of evolution. High-resolution CT scans of the skill of Rena dulcis are also available from the good people at UT Austin's DigiMorph project. The jaws (upper in typhlopids, lower in leptotyphlopids) move about independently of the skull to a remarkable degree. You can get a really good idea of that motion by watching videos of leptotyphlopids here, here, and here, and of typhlopids here and here. As soon as they're in the mouth, those larvae are goners! These snakes are unlike all others in that they eat  huge numbers of prey items very quickly, thanks to their unique jaw architecture. One Blackish Blindsnake (Austrotyphlops nigrescens) from Australia was recorded to have eaten over 1,431 ant larvae/pupae in one sitting! Some blindsnakes have cloacal secretions that aid in repelling attacking ants or chemically camouflaging the blindsnakes, which live inside ant mounds. The list of amazing attributes goes on and on - and there is much more for scientists to find out!

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Thanks to Count_Strad, Toby Hibbits, Gary Nafis, and Nate Kley for use of their photos and figures.

REFERENCES

Gehlbach, F. and R. Baldridge. 1987. Live blind snakes (Leptotyphlops dulcis) in eastern screech owl (Otus asio) nests: a novel commensalism. Oecologia 71:560-563. <link>

Kley, N. J. 2001. Prey transport mechanisms in blindsnakes and the evolution of unilateral feeding systems in snakes. American Zoologist 41:1321-1337. <link>

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