Data from: Barb geometry of asymmetrical feathers reveals a transitional morphology in the evolution of avian flight

The geometry of feather barbs (barb length and barb angle) determines feather vane asymmetry and vane rigidity, which are both critical to a feather's aerodynamic performance. Here, we describe the relationship between barb geometry and aerodynamic function across the evolutionary history of asymmetrical flight feathers, from Mesozoic taxa outside of modern avian diversity (Microraptor, Archaeopteryx, Sapeornis, Confuciusornis and the enantiornithine Eopengornis) to an extensive sample of modern birds. Contrary to previous assumptions, we find that barb angle is not related to vane-width asymm... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Feo, Teresa J.
Field, Daniel J.
Prum, Richard O.
Dokumenttyp: other
Erscheinungsdatum: 2015
Schlagwörter: Athene cunicularia / Junco hyemalis / Nymphicus hollandicus / Gallinula neiotis / Eopengornis martini / Todus mexicanus / asymmetrical flight feather / Petrochelidon pyrrhonota / Zenaida asiatica / Atlantisia rogersi / Calypte anna / Gavia immer / Chordeiles acutipennis / Podilymbus gigas / Callipepla californica / Pipra mentalis / Dendragapus canadensis / Archaeopteryx / Alectoris Chukar / Gallirallus sylvestris / Larus marinus / Oporornis tolmiei / Numenius americanus / Falco columbarius / Chaetura pelagica / Porzana atra / Gallirallus australis / Tachyeres leucocephalus / Protonotaria citrea / Pica nuttalli / Passerella iliaca / Zonotrichia albicollis / Columbina passerina / Spizella pusilla / Aphelocoma californica / Anser fabalis / Seiurus motacilla / Streptopelia decaocto / Sphyrapicus varius / Coragyps atratus / Elanus leucurus / Cathartes aura / Numida meleagris / Strigops habroptilus / Cyanocitta stelleri / Dendroica coronata / Vermivora celata / Pinguinus impennis / Megacrex inepta / Progne subis
Sprache: unknown
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26728478
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
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Link(s) : https://zenodo.org/record/4942877

The geometry of feather barbs (barb length and barb angle) determines feather vane asymmetry and vane rigidity, which are both critical to a feather's aerodynamic performance. Here, we describe the relationship between barb geometry and aerodynamic function across the evolutionary history of asymmetrical flight feathers, from Mesozoic taxa outside of modern avian diversity (Microraptor, Archaeopteryx, Sapeornis, Confuciusornis and the enantiornithine Eopengornis) to an extensive sample of modern birds. Contrary to previous assumptions, we find that barb angle is not related to vane-width asymmetry; instead barb angle varies with vane function, whereas barb length variation determines vane asymmetry. We demonstrate that barb geometry significantly differs among functionally distinct portions of flight feather vanes, and that cutting-edge leading vanes occupy a distinct region of morphospace characterized by small barb angles. This cutting-edge vane morphology is ubiquitous across a phylogenetically and functionally diverse sample of modern birds and Mesozoic stem birds, revealing a fundamental aerodynamic adaptation that has persisted from the Late Jurassic. However, in Mesozoic taxa stemward of Ornithurae and Enantiornithes, trailing vane barb geometry is distinctly different from that of modern birds. In both modern birds and enantiornithines, trailing vanes have larger barb angles than in comparatively stemward taxa like Archaeopteryx, which exhibit small trailing vane barb angles. This discovery reveals a previously unrecognized evolutionary transition in flight feather morphology, which has important implications for the flight capacity of early feathered theropods such as Archaeopteryx and Microraptor. Our findings suggest that the fully modern avian flight feather, and possibly a modern capacity for powered flight, evolved crownward of Confuciusornis, long after the origin of asymmetrical flight feathers, and much later than previously recognized. ; Feo-2015_PRSB_PaperDataMeasurements of modern flying, ...