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  • [INTRO ♪]

  • Sea snakes are the most common group of marine reptiles in the entire ocean, with almost seventy individual species.

  • But despite their impressive diversity, none of them live in the Atlantic Ocean.

  • Which is weird, and also nice! There's a whole ocean with no snakes in it!

  • But also there's an entire ocean of snake food and living space out there, so what's going on?

  • The answer lies in their evolution, their biology, and a weirdlydrypart of the ocean.

  • The first reason is deceptively simple: modern sea snakes didn't evolve in the Atlantic.

  • All sea snakes alive today evolved in a part of the Pacific known as the Coral Triangle and nearby regions,

  • with most species evolving in the last two and a half million years.

  • So they might not have started in the Atlantic, but they've had millions of years to theoretically move there and establish new populations.

  • But they haven't, in part because it's a pretty big ocean for such little reptiles.

  • Only one species of sea snake, the yellow-bellied sea snake, lives in the open ocean.

  • Most of the others only live in near-shore shallows.

  • The yellow-belly is the only species that would have much chance of making it to the Atlantic.

  • But each of the different ways it could even hypothetically reach the Atlantic has its problems.

  • Like, going around the tip of South America or Africa might be too cold.

  • Yellow-bellied sea snakes need temperatures above 20 degrees Celsius in order to be toasty enough to breed.

  • And too far below 18 and they'll flat out die.

  • Given an annual mean ocean temperature of less than 17 degrees off the coast of South Africa, that's a no-go.

  • Yellow-bellied sea snakes actually can live directly south of Africa, but it might be that the ocean is too cold just west of there,

  • so they still couldn't make the whole trip.

  • Oddly enough, going around Africa might also be too dry.

  • Sea snakes can't drink salt water.

  • Instead, they drink a thin layer of rainwater that floats on the surface of the ocean after storms.

  • Yes, this is a thing. That's wild.

  • But the southwest coast of Africa includes the Namib Desert with its infamous Skeleton Coast.

  • This region may go years without rain, even out at sea.

  • Sea snakes going this way could become dehydrated and die.

  • And they might not have any more luck trying to go the other way, where North and South America are the obstacle.

  • Millions of years ago, there was an open corridor between the Pacific and the Atlantic in what is now Panama

  • a much warmer route than rounding the southern tips of Africa or South America.

  • Trouble is, the isthmus of Panama formed long before sea snakes evolved,

  • blocking them from simply swimming from one ocean to the other.

  • We humans have opened that passage back up in the form of the Panama canal.

  • And there have been reports of individual sea snakes on the Caribbean coast of Colombiawhich presumably made the trip through the canal.

  • Even so, scientists think it's unlikely they'll establish an actual breeding population via this route.

  • So in the end, even though it might seem like the Atlantic could be a nice home for the sea snakes with warm water and tasty prey,

  • their biology and evolutionary history put that possibility pretty much out of reach.

  • If you're the kind of person who wonders why certain reptiles never moved to certain parts of the oceanwell, you are as curious as we are.

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  • [OUTRO ♪]

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