Abstract
Live birth is a key innovation that has evolved from egg laying ancestors over 100 times in reptiles. However, egg-laying lizards and snakes often have preferred body temperatures that are lethal to developing embryos and should prevent egg retention: how has viviparity repeatedly evolved in the face of this pervasive mismatch? We resolve this paradox by conducting phylogenetic analyses of adult and embryo thermal preferences across 224 species. Thermal mismatches between mothers and offspring are widespread but resolved by gravid females down-regulating their body temperature towards the thermal optimum of embryos. Importantly, this thermoregulatory behaviour evolved in ancestral egg-laying species before the evolution of live birth. Maternal thermoregulatory behaviour therefore bypasses the constraints imposed by a slowly evolving thermal physiology and is likely to have been a key requirement for repeated transitions to live birth.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
↵# Joint senior author
Error bars now showing on Figures 2 and 3. Correction to Figure 1.