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Dive into the research topics where Bart Vervust is active.

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Featured researches published by Bart Vervust.


Physiological and Biochemical Zoology | 2010

Anatomical and Physiological Changes Associated with a Recent Dietary Shift in the Lizard Podarcis sicula

Bart Vervust; Panayiotis Pafilis; Efstratios D. Valakos; Raoul Van Damme

Dietary shifts have played a major role in the evolution of many vertebrates. The idea that the evolution of herbivory is physiologically constrained in squamates is challenged by a number of observations that suggest that at least some lizards can overcome the putative physiological difficulties of herbivory on evolutionary and even ecological timescales. We compared a number of morphological and physiological traits purportedly associated with plant consumption between two island populations of the lacertid lizard Podarcis sicula. Previous studies revealed considerable differences in the amount of plant material consumed between those populations. We continued the investigation of this study system and explored the degree of divergence in morphology (dentition, gut morphology), digestive performance (gut passage time, digestive efficiency), and ecology (endosymbiont density). In addition, we also performed a preliminary analysis of the plasticity of some of these modifications. Our results confirm and expand earlier findings concerning divergence in the morphology of feeding structures between two island populations of P. sicula lizards. In addition to the differences in skull dimensions and the prevalence of cecal valves previously reported, these two recently diverged populations also differ in aspects of their dentition (teeth width) and the lengths of the stomach and small intestine. The plasticity experiment suggests that at least some of the changes associated with a dietary shift toward a higher proportion of plant material may be plastic. Our results also show that these morphological changes effectively translate into differences in digestive performance: the population with the longer digestive tract exhibits longer gut passage time and improved digestive efficiency.


Central European Journal of Biology | 2011

Seeing through the lizard’s trick: do avian predators avoid autotomous tails?

Bart Vervust; Hans Van Loy; Raoul Van Damme

Counter-adaptations of predators towards their prey are a far less investigated phenomenon in predator-prey interactions. Caudal autotomy is generally considered an effective last-resort mechanism for evading predators. However, in victim-exploiter relationships, the efficacy of a strategy will obviously depend on the antagonist’s ability to counter it. In the logic of the predator-prey arms race, one would expect predators to develop attack strategies that minimize the chance of autotomy of the prey and damage on the predator. We tested whether avian predators preferred grasping lizards by their head. We constructed plasticine models of the Italian wall lizard (Podarcis sicula) and placed them in natural habitat of the species. Judging from counts of beak marks on the models, birds preferentially attack the head and might also avoid the tail and limb regions. While a preference for the head might not necessarily demonstrate tail and limb avoidance, this topic needs further exploration because it suggests that even unspecialised avian predators may see through the lizard’s trick-of-the-tail. This result may have implications for our understanding of the evolution of this peculiar defensive system and the loss or decreased tendency to shed the tail on island systems with the absence of terrestrial predators.


Journal of Herpetology | 2008

Fluctuating Asymmetry, Physiological Performance, and Stress in Island Populations of the Italian Wall Lizard (Podarcis sicula)

Bart Vervust; Stefan Van Dongen; Irena Grbac; Raoul Van Damme

Abstract The use of fluctuating asymmetry (FA) as a measure of developmental instability, and its relationship to stress and fitness, is highly controversial. Here, we present results from a preliminary study comparing levels of asymmetry in various characteristics between two island populations of the Italian Wall Lizard (Podarcis sicula), one of which was recently founded. We relate individual asymmetry to several measures of physiological performance. Levels of FA varied clearly among the traits studied. Repeatability of FA estimates was high for meristic traits but low for metric traits. Levels of FA were on average higher in the newly founded population. We found a significant decrease in exertion (time until exhaustion by continuously chasing) with increasing levels of fluctuating asymmetry (i.e., more symmetric individuals had a higher exertion). Speed of locomotion showed a positive trend with increasing FA. No relationship was found between individual levels of FA and bite force. These results suggest that FA estimates, based on the accurate measurement of several traits, may be useful in explaining differences in developmental stability and physiological performance at the individual and population level.


Journal of Experimental Zoology | 2011

Temperature effects on snapping performance in the common snapper Chelydra serpentina (Reptilia, Testudines)

Bart Vervust; Jonathan Brecko; Anthony Herrel

Studies on the effect of temperature on whole-animal performance traits other than locomotion are rare. Here we investigate the effects of temperature on the performance of the turtle feeding apparatus in a defensive context. We measured bite force and the kinematics of snapping in the Common Snapping Turtle (Chelydra serpentina) over a wide range of body temperatures. Bite force performance was thermally insensitive over the broad range of temperatures typically experienced by these turtles in nature. In contrast, neck extension (velocity, acceleration, and deceleration) and jaw movements (velocity, acceleration, and deceleration) showed clear temperature dependence with peak acceleration and deceleration capacity increasing with increasing temperatures. Our results regarding the temperature dependence of defensive behavior are reflected by the ecology and overall behavior of this species. These data illustrate the necessity for carefully controlling T(b) when carrying out behavioral and functional studies on turtles as temperature affects the velocity, acceleration, and deceleration of jaw and neck extension movements. More generally, these data add to the limited but increasing number of studies showing that temperature may have important effects on feeding and defensive performance in ectotherms.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Heterochrony and Early Left-Right Asymmetry in the Development of the Cardiorespiratory System of Snakes

Benjamin J. van Soldt; Brian D. Metscher; Robert E. Poelmann; Bart Vervust; Freek J. Vonk; Gerd B. Müller; Michael K. Richardson

Snake lungs show a remarkable diversity of organ asymmetries. The right lung is always fully developed, while the left lung is either absent, vestigial, or well-developed (but smaller than the right). A ‘tracheal lung’ is present in some taxa. These asymmetries are reflected in the pulmonary arteries. Lung asymmetry is known to appear at early stages of development in Thamnophis radix and Natrix natrix. Unfortunately, there is no developmental data on snakes with a well-developed or absent left lung. We examine the adult and developmental morphology of the lung and pulmonary arteries in the snakes Python curtus breitensteini, Pantherophis guttata guttata, Elaphe obsoleta spiloides, Calloselasma rhodostoma and Causus rhombeatus using gross dissection, MicroCT scanning and 3D reconstruction. We find that the right and tracheal lung develop similarly in these species. By contrast, the left lung either: (1) fails to develop; (2) elongates more slowly and aborts early without (2a) or with (2b) subsequent development of faveoli; (3) or develops normally. A right pulmonary artery always develops, but the left develops only if the left lung develops. No pulmonary artery develops in relation to the tracheal lung. We conclude that heterochrony in lung bud development contributes to lung asymmetry in several snake taxa. Secondly, the development of the pulmonary arteries is asymmetric at early stages, possibly because the splanchnic plexus fails to develop when the left lung is reduced. Finally, some changes in the topography of the pulmonary arteries are consequent on ontogenetic displacement of the heart down the body. Our findings show that the left-right asymmetry in the cardiorespiratory system of snakes is expressed early in development and may become phenotypically expressed through heterochronic shifts in growth, and changes in axial relations of organs and vessels. We propose a step-wise model for reduction of the left lung during snake evolution.


Oikos | 2007

Differences in morphology, performance and behaviour between recently diverged populations of Podarcis sicula mirror differences in predation pressure

Bart Vervust; Irena Grbac; Raoul Van Damme


Biological Journal of The Linnean Society | 2012

Physiological colour change in the Moorish gecko, Tarentola mauritanica (Squamata: Gekkonidae): effects of background, light, and temperature

Jessica Vroonen; Bart Vervust; Domenico Fulgione; Valeria Maselli; Raoul Van Damme


Functional Ecology | 2009

The mystery of the missing toes: extreme levels of natural mutilation in island lizard populations

Bart Vervust; Stefan Van Dongen; Irena Grbac; Raoul Van Damme


Acta Oecologica-international Journal of Ecology | 2008

Do morphological condition indices predict locomotor performance in the lizard Podarcis sicula

Bart Vervust; Simon P. Lailvaux; Irena Grbac; Raoul Van Damme


Archive | 2011

Head Morphology and Diet in the Dice Snake (Natrix tessellata)

Jonathan Brecko; Bart Vervust; Anthony Herrel; Raoul Van Damme

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Irena Grbac

American Museum of Natural History

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Robert E. Poelmann

Leiden University Medical Center

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