Abstract

Public databases in taxonomy, phylogenetics and geographic and fossil occurrence records are key research tools that provide raw materials, on which broad-scale analyses and synthesis in their respective fields are based. Comparable repositories for natural history observations are rare. Publicly available natural history data on traits like diet, habitat and reproduction are scattered across an extensive primary literature and remain relatively inaccessible to researchers interested in using these data for broad-scale analyses in macroecology and macroevolution. In this paper, I introduce SquamataBase, an open-source R package and database of predator-prey records involving the world’s snakes. SquamataBase facilitates the discovery of natural history observations for use in comparative analyses and synthesis and, in its current form, contains observations of at least 18,304 predator individuals comprising 1,227 snake species and at least 58,633 prey items comprising 3,231 prey taxa. To facilitate integration with comparative analysis workflows, the data are distributed inside an R package, which also provides basic functionality for common data manipulation and filtering operations. Moving forward, the continued development of public natural history databases and their integration with existing digitisation efforts in biodiversity science should become a priority.

Highlights

  • Understanding how organisms interact with their environment lies at the heart of evolutionary biology and ecology

  • Natural history is fundamental to our understanding of a broad variety of phenomena, from diversity gradients to adaptive radiation to community assembly (Futumya 1998, Stroud and Losos 2016)

  • Specimen-based databases are available for these latter data types, they are woefully lacking for natural history observations

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding how organisms interact with their environment lies at the heart of evolutionary biology and ecology. Like geographic occurrences or nucleotide sequences, are inherently tied to individual organisms, but unlike these latter, data can seldom be queried and downloaded at a specimen-based level. I briefly introduce and describe SquamataBase, an open-source R package and specimen-based database of predator-prey observations involving the world’s snakes.

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