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Late Cretaceous bird from Madagascar reveals unique development of beaks
by
Felice, Ryan N.
, O’Connor, Patrick M.
, Groenke, Joseph R.
, Rahantarisoa, Lydia J.
, Turner, Alan H.
, Rogers, Raymond R.
, Krause, David W.
in
631/181/414
/ 704/181
/ Adaptation
/ Animals
/ Beak
/ Beak - anatomy & histology
/ Beaks
/ Biological Evolution
/ Birds
/ Birds - anatomy & histology
/ Birds - classification
/ Cretaceous
/ Ecology
/ Edentulous
/ Enlargement
/ Extinct birds
/ Feeding behavior
/ Fossils
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Lability
/ Madagascar
/ Maxilla
/ Mesozoic
/ Morphology
/ multidisciplinary
/ Natural history
/ New species
/ Pattern formation
/ Phenotypes
/ Phylogenetics
/ Phylogeny
/ Physiological aspects
/ Rostrum
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Stems
2020
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Late Cretaceous bird from Madagascar reveals unique development of beaks
by
Felice, Ryan N.
, O’Connor, Patrick M.
, Groenke, Joseph R.
, Rahantarisoa, Lydia J.
, Turner, Alan H.
, Rogers, Raymond R.
, Krause, David W.
in
631/181/414
/ 704/181
/ Adaptation
/ Animals
/ Beak
/ Beak - anatomy & histology
/ Beaks
/ Biological Evolution
/ Birds
/ Birds - anatomy & histology
/ Birds - classification
/ Cretaceous
/ Ecology
/ Edentulous
/ Enlargement
/ Extinct birds
/ Feeding behavior
/ Fossils
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Lability
/ Madagascar
/ Maxilla
/ Mesozoic
/ Morphology
/ multidisciplinary
/ Natural history
/ New species
/ Pattern formation
/ Phenotypes
/ Phylogenetics
/ Phylogeny
/ Physiological aspects
/ Rostrum
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Stems
2020
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Late Cretaceous bird from Madagascar reveals unique development of beaks
by
Felice, Ryan N.
, O’Connor, Patrick M.
, Groenke, Joseph R.
, Rahantarisoa, Lydia J.
, Turner, Alan H.
, Rogers, Raymond R.
, Krause, David W.
in
631/181/414
/ 704/181
/ Adaptation
/ Animals
/ Beak
/ Beak - anatomy & histology
/ Beaks
/ Biological Evolution
/ Birds
/ Birds - anatomy & histology
/ Birds - classification
/ Cretaceous
/ Ecology
/ Edentulous
/ Enlargement
/ Extinct birds
/ Feeding behavior
/ Fossils
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Lability
/ Madagascar
/ Maxilla
/ Mesozoic
/ Morphology
/ multidisciplinary
/ Natural history
/ New species
/ Pattern formation
/ Phenotypes
/ Phylogenetics
/ Phylogeny
/ Physiological aspects
/ Rostrum
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Stems
2020
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Late Cretaceous bird from Madagascar reveals unique development of beaks
Journal Article
Late Cretaceous bird from Madagascar reveals unique development of beaks
2020
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Overview
Mesozoic birds display considerable diversity in size, flight adaptations and feather organization
1
–
4
, but exhibit relatively conserved patterns of beak shape and development
5
–
7
. Although Neornithine (that is, crown group) birds also exhibit constraint on facial development
8
,
9
, they have comparatively diverse beak morphologies associated with a range of feeding and behavioural ecologies, in contrast to Mesozoic birds. Here we describe a crow-sized stem bird,
Falcatakely forsterae
gen. et sp. nov., from the Late Cretaceous epoch of Madagascar that possesses a long and deep rostrum, an expression of beak morphology that was previously unknown among Mesozoic birds and is superficially similar to that of a variety of crown-group birds (for example, toucans). The rostrum of
Falcatakely
is composed of an expansive edentulous maxilla and a small tooth-bearing premaxilla. Morphometric analyses of individual bony elements and three-dimensional rostrum shape reveal the development of a neornithine-like facial anatomy despite the retention of a maxilla–premaxilla organization that is similar to that of nonavialan theropods. The patterning and increased height of the rostrum in
Falcatakely
reveals a degree of developmental lability and increased morphological disparity that was previously unknown in early branching avialans. Expression of this phenotype (and presumed ecology) in a stem bird underscores that consolidation to the neornithine-like, premaxilla-dominated rostrum was not an evolutionary prerequisite for beak enlargement.
A crow-sized stem bird,
Falcatakely forsterae
, possesses a long and deep rostrum—a beak morphology that was previously unknown among Mesozoic birds and is similar to that of some crown-group birds, such as toucans.
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