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Blackburn, D.G. (2000b). Reptilian viviparity:
Past research, future directions, and appropriate models. Comparative
Biochemistry and Physiology (in press).
Abstract. Squamate reptiles represent an ideal group
for studies of viviparity, because they have evolved this reproductive pattern frequently,
relatively recently, and at low taxonomic levels. A phylogenetic approach shows particular promise in helping us
interpret anatomical, physiological, and ecological diversity. This review summarizes four major categories
of active investigation: (1)
reproductive anatomy and physiology; (2) placental structure and function; (3)
reproductive endocrinology; and (4) reproductive and physiological
ecology. Evolutionary reconstructions
suggest that on many occasions viviparity has evolved concomitantly with
functional placentation, through reduction of the shell membrane and hormonal
modifications that prolong gestation.
Studies of placentotrophic clades as well as reproductively bimodal
species offer great potential for explaining the evolution of viviparity and
placentation. However, live-bearing
squamates are reproductively diverse, and appear to have solved physiological
problems associated with viviparity by a variety of mechanisms. Consequently, studies on one or a few
squamate species appear increasingly unlikely to yield all-inclusive
explanations. Future studies and
analyses should abandon assumptions of universal physiological mechanisms and a
single historical sequence, in favor of the documentation of diversity in
phylogenetic and quantitative terms.
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Reprints: daniel.blackburn@mail.trincoll.edu