Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds (original) (raw)
GEOL 204 Dinosaurs, Early Humans, Ancestors & Evolution:
The Fossil Record of Vanished Worlds of the Prehistoric Past
Spring Semester 2023
Feathered Dragons: Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds
"Hope is the thing with feathers That perches in the soul And sings the tune without the words And never stops at all." Emily Dickinson (1861)
and
"The members of class Aves so nearly approach the Reptilia in all the essential and fundamental points of their structure, that the phrase "Birds are greatly modified Reptiles" would hardly be an exaggerated expression of the closeness of that resemblance." -- Thomas H. Huxley. 1867. On the classification of Birds; and on the taxonomic value of the modification of certain cranial bones observed in that class. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 1867: 415-472.
BIG QUESTION: How did birds evolve from (other) dinosaurs, and how did they learn to fly?
Up, Up, and AWAY! Flying Animals
In the history of life, only four groups of animals have evolved powered flight:
- Insects: the first fliers, from the Carboniferous Period onward
- Pterosaurs: the first vertebrate fliers, from the Late Triassic until the end of the Cretaceous. The wing is formed by a membrane stretched between the elongate arm (with an extraordinarily long digit IV), the hindlimbs, and the body
- Birds: As we will see, what we mean by "bird" is problematic! If by "animals closer to modern birds than to Deinonychus, that group (Avialae) is present by the end of the Middle Jurassic; if we mean "fully powered flying birds", then that is probably the clade Ornithothoraces, and thus from the Early Cretaceous onward. Bird wings are formed by feathers attached along the elongate forelimb
- Bats: from the Paleogene Period onward (oldest bats about 55 Ma). Bat wings are formed by skin stretched between elongate arms with especially elongate digits III-V, the hindlimb, the tail, and the body.
To possess powered flight is to be volant. But there are other forms of aerial locomotion. These include the essentialy vertical parachuting and the more controlled and linear gliding
While there are only three groups of volant vertebrates, there are many modern gliding/parachuting ones: flying fish; flying frogs; flying lizards; flying snakes; sugar gliders (gliding marsupials); flying squirrels; colugos, or "flying lemurs". In addition, there were various extinct gliding reptilesand mammals in the Permian and Mesozoic.
Aves is the Word: What is a "Bird"?
Aves is the traditional Linnaean name for birds, and is used presently for crown-group birds (i.e., all descendants of the concestor of all living birds.) Avian is the adjective for issues of or concerning for members of Aves.
Pterosaurs are not birds. Nor are they dinosaurs. In contrast, EVERY bird species is a dinosaur! (Recall that Dinosauria = the concestor of Iguanodon, Megalosaurus, and Diplodocus and all of its descendants.)
At present there are between 9600 to 18,000 living species (depending on whether you are a lumper or splitter) of birds, and just 2000 years ago this number was probably an additional 3,000 more. (The difference was due to the extinction of many species of birds unique to individual islands of the Pacific and Indian Oceans: these suffered greatly as Polynesians (and later, Europeans) introduced pigs, rats, dogs, and goats to the islands.) In contrast, living mammals consist of some 4500-5600 species or so.
Many features make birds distinctive from their close living relatives among the reptiles:
- Feathers
- Toothless beak
- Endothermy
- Obligate bipedality
- A furcula ("wishbone"), formed by fusion of the clavicles ("collar bones")
- A huge sternum (breastbone) with a deep keel for support of the powerful muscles for upstroke and downstroke
- A backwards-pointing pubis bone
- A pygostyle (fusion of the tail vertebrae
- Fusion of the bones of the palms of the hand
- Highly-reduced three fingers (in fact, sometimes a finger is lost entirely)
- A 1st toe that is placed at the bottom of the foot which in most of them points backwards
- And many, many others
It is almost impossible to mistake a bird for any other group of animal in the modern world, and vice versa. But as we will see, this is not true in the fossil record.
History of Bird Origins Studies
Because the distinctiveness of birds, it was difficult for biologists to determine the closest living relation among modern animals. Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck suggested that turtles were the closest relative to birds, with sea turtles and penguins representing transitional forms.
The fossil record of transitional forms between Aves and other reptiles was greatly improved by the discovery of Archaeopteryx lithographica from the Late Jurassic Solnhofen Lithographic Limestone of Bavaria, Germany. The first specimen (a feather) and the first skeleton (found in 1861; acquired by the Natural History Museum (London) in 1863) showed an animal that had:
- Feathers like a modern bird on the wings, legs, and tail
- A furcula
- A backwards-pointing pubis
- A backwards-pointing 1st toe
- But teeth were present (although in the original specimen the jaws weren't present, so they couldn't tell for certain that the teeth came from Archaeopteryx)
- And there was no pygostyle
The skeleton was not complete, but still achieved considerable attention. In the 1860s paleontologist T.H. Huxley used the London specimen as evidence that the newly discovered Dinosauria were more closely related to birds than to other groups of living or fossil reptiles.
In 1874 (or 1875) an even more complete skeleton of Archaeopteryx was discovered; in 1881 it was acquired by the Humboldt Museum in Berlin. This confirmed the presence of teeth in its jaws, and showed presence of individual fingers with claws.
In the 1870s Yale paleontologist described Cretaceous birds from the Niobrara Chalk of Kansas. These included flightless swimming Hesperornis and flying Ichthyornis. Both were far more closely related to modern birds than was Archaeopteryx, but still retained teeth in their jaws.
In the late 19th Century and earliest 20th Century several models of bird origins were suggested:
- From some generic primitive quadrupedal reptile
- From some close common ancestor with pterosaurs (who were also powered fliers)
- From some close common ancestor with dinosaurs?
- Or actually from some kind of dinosaur?
With the discovery of coelurosaurian dinosaurs like Compsognathus and Ornitholestes some paleontologists and others were convinced of the latter idea. When writing of Ornitholestes, H.N. Hutchinson (1910, Extinct Monsters and Creatures of Other Days) wrote:
"The present writer was so much struck by the resemblance between this skeleton and that of Archaeopteryx, that he even ventured to suggest that possibly this supposed Dinosaur may have been a bird, perhaps the first bird that ever existed!"
The dinosaurian origin of bird hypothesis, however, was deflected by the well-meaning work of anatomical illustrator and amateur paleontologist Gerhard Heilmann (1855-1946). He wrote a series of articles in Danish between 1913 and 1916 which were collected and translated into English in 1923 as The Origin of Birds. He conclusive showed what Huxley and others had proposed: birds were some kind of archosaur. He compared birds to various groups of dinosaurs; to pterosaurs; to early crocodylomorphs; and to "thecodonts" (the then-fashionable name for the paraphyletic grade of basal archosauriforms, non-crocodylomorph pseudosuchians, and non-pterosaur, non-dinosaur ornithodirans).
Heilmann showed considerable shared derived features between birds and coelurosaurian theropods. But as no one had yet demonstrated a clavicle in a theropod, there was no feature that could evolve into a furcula. So the similarities between birds and dinosaurs had to be convergences. Instead, Heilmann pointed to "thecodonts" (in this case, basal archosauriforms) such as the then-recently discovered Euparkeria of the Middle Triassic of South Africa, which he deemed "sufficiently primitive" to be a bird ancestor.
Heilmann also proposed a scenario for the origin of birds: quadrupedal thecodonts which had adapted to life in the trees. These grew elongated scales which served as gliding surfaces on the arms, body, and tail in a long-armed hypothetical "proavis", which was the ancestor of Archaeopteryx and thus to later birds.
Heilmann's book was phenomenally successful, and dominated thinking on bird origins until the 1970s. Standard pictures for archosaur evolution showed birds, pterosaurs, ornithischian dinosaurs, saurischian dinosaurs, and crocodylomorphs all radiating independently from a common thecodont stock. (Note: dinosaurs were considered at best diphyletic [two independent origins] within Archosauria.) And the arboreal gliding proavis was the standard model for the origin of avian flight.
In 1969 John Ostrom of Yale described the dromaeosaurid Deinonychus. This was the first raptor dinosaur (deinonychosaur) known from relatively complete material, and showed considerable similarity with Archaeopteryx. In fact, Ostrom discovered a specimen of Archaeopteryx (miscatalogued as a specimen of pterosaur!) in a museum in the Netherlands. From comparisons of their skeletons, Ostrom demonstrated that deinonychosaurs (and some other coelurosaurs) and birds shared many traits, such as:
- A semilunate carpal (or "half-moon-shaped wrist bone), allowing the hand to flex close to the forearm
- Backwards-pointing pubis bones in deinonychosaurs as well as birds
- Particular openings in the snout (since found in nearly all groups of theropod dinosaur)
(Just recently that specimen that Ostrom discovered as a pterosaur was re-examined and found not to be Archaeopteryx, either. It is from the more primitive stem-bird lineage Anchiornithidae, and named Ostromia in his honor.)
Ostrom revived the dinosaurian origin of birds hypothesis, which a new specific sister-group relationship between Deinonychosauria and birds. Subsequently Heilmann's primary objection was removed: it was found that theropods did not merely have clavicles; they in fact ALL possessed a furcula!
The initial cladistic analyses of dinosaurs and archosaurs in general (in the early 1980s) focused on testing the dinosaurian origin of birds hypothesis. Ostrom's idea stood up to this test. In 1986 Jacques Gauthier (who would a decade or so later have Ostrom's chair at Yale after the latter's retirement) coined the name "Avialae" ("bird wings") for the group comprised of Aves and all taxa sharing a more recent common ancestor with Aves than with Deinonychosauria. At the time non-avian members of Avialae were still restricted basically to Archaeopteryx, Hesperornis, and Ichthyornis.
This hypothesis was not without its detractors. Prominent among these were paleornithologists Alan Feduccia and Larry Martin and physiologist John Ruben. At conferences in the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s they referred to themselves as the "BAND" (for "Birds Are Not Dinosaurs"). Their primary arguments during the 1980s and 1990s were that Heilmann was correct and the similarity between coelurosaurs and birds were just convergences. Instead they argued that newly-discovered Middle or Late Triassic quadrupedal "thecodonts" (actually not even archosauriforms, but primitive diapers) such as Megalancosaurus and Longisquama were the ancestors of birds.
Simultaneous with these arguments, an explosion of discoveries (which has definitely NOT stopped!) of Mesozoic avialians has gone on. These are primarily due to several Lagerstätten yielding dozens of new genera (and literally thousands of specimens, often nearly complete skeletons and feather impressions):
- Middle/Late Jurassic: the Daohugou Beds of China
- Early Cretaceous: the Calizas de La Huergina Formation of Spain, and (above all) the Huajiyin, Yixian, and Jiufotang Formations of China (collectively the "Jehol Group")
Because of this, many steps and morphological transitions along the lineage leading to Aves are now documented among Jurassic and Cretaceous avialians and other coelurosaurs. Indeed, uniquely among flying vertebrates we have a problem in indicating exactly when "birdiness" is achieved, because we have so many gradual transitions in between. (In contrast, both pterosaurs and bats appear in the fossil record as pterosaurs and bats, not proto-pterosaurs and proto-bats.)
The Evolution of Feathers
Until recently, the basalmost theropod known to have feathers was Archaeopteryx, although some researchers speculated that other theropods had them as well. And the feathers of Archaeopteryx were identical to the feathers of modern birds, so they didn't reveal much about the early phases of these structures. But fossils from lake sediments of the Middle and Late Jurassic of China and Siberia and the Early Cretaceous of Spain and China have given us a better understanding of the distribution of feathers and protofeather structures.
It was not just avialians that were discovered in these Lagerstätten. These also revealed the presence of feathers in non-avialian dinosaurs. The first discovered of these (in 1996) were simple apparently hollow down-like tufts: plumulose structures dubbed protofeathers on the compsognathid coelurosaur Sinosauropteryx. Subsequently similar structures were found on numerous other types of primitive coelurosaurs, including 1 ton tyrannosaurs such as Yutyrannus. And their presence in the ornithischians Tianyulong and Kulindadromeus hints at the possibility that protofeathers are basal to all dinosaurs. (And if pterosaurian pycnofibres are homologous to protofeathers, these might be basal to all Ornithodira).
Protofeathers obviously don't have a flight function, since they don't form an aerodynamic surface. However, they might serve other functions:
- Insulation (like fur of mammals and body feathers of birds)
- Display (particularly as they might have been brightly colored and/or patterned)
- Cover for brooding eggs
- Sensory function (like the whiskers of mammals)
- Or a combination thereof
More derived are strap-like protofeathers: broad surfaces rather than tufts.
Four major clades of coelurosaurs (Avialae, Deinonychosauria, Oviraptorosauria, and [less definitively] Ornithomimosauria) show broad pennaceous feathers on the arms; the first three (collectively called Pennaraptora) have them both on the arms and the tail. These same pennaraptoran dinosaurs are also characterized by sideways-oriented shoulder joints, semilunate carpals, and direct brooding of the eggs. In Deinonychosauria and primitive members of Avialae (but not in Oviraptorosauria, at least as far as we know), there are long leg feathers as well.
Pennaceous feathers are very diverse in modern birds: found in flight feathers on the wings and tail; contour feathers over the body; and various decorative feathers. All have a similar structure: a central shaft (rachis), with barbs coming off of it, barbules coming off the barbs, and hooklets coming off the barbules. Developmental biology shows that plumulose down and pennaceous feathers have the same developmental pattern, just with genes emphasizing different rates of development of various parts of the developing structure. These developmental stages match the observed stages in the fossil record.
The discovery of feathers on other groups of theropods has reduced the number of uniquely bird traits in Archaeopteryx. Indeed, discovery of new Jurassic feathered dinosaurs closely related to Archaeopteryx results in some phylogenetic analyses in which this "Archaeopterygidae" is not necessarily a basal clade of Avialae, but instead is a basal clade in Deinonychosauria or the sister group to Deinonychosauria and Avialae.
(Note: in response to the discovery of fully-feathered deinonychosaurs and oviraptorsaurs, the BAND have decided that these clades are NOT dinosaurs, but are basal birds convergent on coelurosaurs!)
So where do "birds" begin? Would we use Pennaraptora? Or Avialae? Or Aves (the toothless crown group)? Or some spot in between?
Flight Diversity
Evolution doesn't work by massive instantaneous transformations: a fully flying modern style bird did not hatch out of a totally non-flying dinosaurs egg! Instead, each phase along the way functioned in its own way, well enough for that dinosaur to make a living at it. And (as we'll see) it wasn't as if dinosaurs were trying to become birds; instead, each adaptive phase produced several divergent branches, some evolving in one direction and others in others.
Our knowledge of the phases of the origin of bird flight (anatomical, phylogenetic, and behavioral) have all greatly increased in the last decade. But before we see this newer understanding, let's review some terms and take an historical look at the problem.
Some key terms:
- Arboreal: tree-dwelling (spends most of the time in the tree branches)
- Cursorial: running
- Integument: body covering, such as scales, feathers, fur, etc.
- Scansorial: tree-climbing (spends most of the time on the ground, but will climb up into trees to rest, hide, etc.)
- Powered flight: capable of generating lift and thrust with wings in order as it travels through the air (as opposed to gliding or parachuting, which might start with a powered leap but only use gravity and air currents once they are in the air)
- Volant: flying
- Pennaceous: classic feather form, with a vane down the middle. Includes flight feathers, contour feathers, and some display feathers
- Plumulose: feathers lacking a major vane. Includes down (the typical covering of modern baby birds) and the "protofeathers" of non-maniraptorn dinosaurs.
"Trees-Down" vs. "Ground-Up"
Traditionally, paleontologists have considered two main scenarios for the origin of bird flight:
- "Trees Down" (also called the Arboreal Model)
- Ancestors of birds were tree-dwellers (arboreal)
- Powered flight evolved from gliding/parachuting:
* Tree-dwelling animals jumped from branch to branch
* Those with a gliding/parachuting surface could travel further, so selection favored development of increased wings
* Eventually, forms modified the gliding surface to give them additional thrust: powered flight - Seems like a reasonable scenario for the origins of the other powered flying vertebrates (pterosaurs, bats)
- Makes sense energetically, since the early gliding phases can use gravity to help them fly long before the need for the development of strong arm muscles
- As seen above, gliders/parachuters are VERY common, and tetrapod gliders/parachuters have consistenly evolved convergently from arboreal animals
- "Ground Up" (also called the Cursorial Model)
- Ancestors of birds were ground running animals (cursorial)
- Powered flight evolved from activity useful to runners, outside of the context of a tree-dwelling phase
* Evolution of the wing stroke evolved in some non-flight context (possibly food capture; possibly as a speed-aid or an aid for leaping and jumping)
* Feathers originally evolved in a non-locomotion context, but were exapted for whatever the possible pre-flight use of the forelimbs was
* Through enlargement of the proto-wing in the non-flight context, the forelimbs became large enough and developed enough to begin to carry the animal through the air
* Birds only got into the trees after having developed the early phases of flight - Birds, unlike bats and pterosaurs, do not make use of a membrane to fly; and there is no fossil evidence that they ever did
- Unlike bats and pterosaurs, the hindlimb is not part of the flight surface; in fact, most modern and fossil birds have perfectly good running legs (just as their outgroups had)
- Until recently, all the known member of avialian outgroups (Deinonychosauria, Oviraptorosauria, Therizinosauria, Ornithomimosauria) were fairly large bodied animals that were unlikely to have spent much time in trees
- But there was a lack of good modern analogues for whatever the ground use scenario would have been
- Also, some questioned whether it would have been energetically feasible for animals to achieved powered flight directly from a running/leaping behavior
(NOTE: during the 1970s-1990s, this debate was tangled up with a scientifically separate debate; that is, where birds fit phylogenetically among the archosaurs. The media in particular made the equation "'arboreal model = non-dinosaurian origin of birds'; 'cursorial model = dinosaurian origin of birds'". But these were actually separate debates. Even among those who recognized the dinosaurian origin of birds, some argued for the trees-down model, and others for the ground-up.)
This debate was primarily waged prior to the new discoveries of Early Cretaceous feathered coelurosaurs, which greatly increased our knowledge of the anatomy (integumentary and skeletal) of the basal members of the coelurosaur clades. Additionally, important observations of modern birds revealed a very significant locomotory behavior, previously overlooked.
New Perspectives on the Origins of Avian Flight
In the early 2000s research by Ken Dial of the University of Montana's Flight Laboratory revealed a locomotory behavior in modern birds not previously realized. Birds (in this case chukar patridges) were discovered to run vertically up surfaces, aided by flapping their wings back and forth in order to generate traction against the surface. They called this behavior Wing Assisted Incline Running, or WAIR for short. They have since found many bird species with this behavior, even perfectly good fliers like pigeons:
Note that these birds are NOT climbing in the typical sense: they are literally running up the sides of trees. Dial and his team studied the ontogenetic (growth) changes in the ability for birds to use this behavior, and also experimented by trimming the feathers of birds to different lengths.
They found:
- As the bird wing develops longer, the bird can WAIR up steeper and steeper slopes
- As the size of the bird's wing feathers increases, the bird can WAIR up steeper and steeper slopes
- The motion used to generate thrust during WAIR is different than that used in flight; in fact, the motions of at least the juvenile form of this locomotion was likely within the scope of typical pennaraptorans.
Additional work has shown that this behavior is widespread among modern birds.
The apparatus required to use WAIR is:
- Elongate arms capable of a broad front-to-back stroke
- Reasonable good chest muscles to power this stroke
- Broad feathers on the arms
- Hindlimbs capable of running
All these attributes are present in many pennaraptorans (oviraptorosaurs, dromaeosaurids, troodontids, basal avialians). Additionally, modern birds use WAIR to escape predators: certainly a selective factor present in the Mesozoic, too! Furthermore, there are net selective advantages to slight increases in the length and breadth of the feathered arm surface: the sort of material that can easily be increased by natural selection.
WAIR might represent a "stepping stone" or "behavioral missing link" in the origin of flight. Small (or juvenile) maniraptorans might have used this method to escape predators. Now that they had the ability to get up into trees and other high spots, some lineages of maniraptorans might become specialized for life up on these high spots. Additional natural selection could favor further development of wing size and shape as an aid for getting back down off of high places (controlled flapping descent), or (eventually) from branch-to-branch.
Thus, WAIR serves as a functional link between cursorial and arboreal models (and organisms). It is a cursorial model in that wings begin in part as an aid to running locomotion (just vertical running); it is an arboreal model in that once pennaraptorans have an ability to get into the trees, evolution can further develop the forelimbs to get them back down to the ground. And all of these behaviors are still found in modern animals: no speculation of behaviors not currently seen needed.
A NEW SCENARIO FOR BIRD FLIGHT ORIGINS: The various recent discoveries of the skeletal and integumentary anatomy of various coelurosaurs (including basal avialians) and the behavioral and biomechanical evidence of modern birds suggests a more complete possible scenario for bird flight evolution than the historical "ground up" or "trees down" versions. Note that as with all evolutionary scenarios this would be a simplification, but the following is consistent with our current evidence: The various recent discoveries of the skeletal and integumentary anatomy of various coelurosaurs (including basal avialians) and the behavioral and biomechanical evidence of modern birds suggests a more complete possible scenario for bird flight evolution than the historical "ground up" or "trees down" versions. Note that as with all evolutionary scenarios this would be a simplification, but the following is consistent with our current evidence:
- Phase I: Protofeathered Cursors (Basal tetanurines (or all dinosaurs?)): These dinosaurs retained the long running legs of theropods ancestrally, and had evolved longer grasping arms, larger brains, and increased agility for capturing prey and/or avoiding being captured themselves. Additionally, these dinosaurs (or their more distant ancestors) evolved plumulose protofeathers (for insulation, display, brooding, sensing, etc.)
- Primitive coelurosaurs such as compsognathids, tyrannosauroids, ornithomimosaurs, therizinosaurs, and alvarezsauroids represent groups showing no real specializations towards a WAIR-related lifestyle, and it is likely that these branches of the coelurosaur tree diverged prior to that specialization. (Note that if Tianyulong and Kulindadromeus's fuzz winds up having the same evolutionary origin as coelurosaurian protofeathers, than Phase I moves all the way down to the base of Dinosauria!)
- As a Phase IB, the evolution of pennaceous feathers (including strap-like protofeathers) by the base of Coelurosauria. However, this doesn't seem to deal with any major locomotory changes, so it doesn't really qualify as a full new phase.
- Phase II: WAIR and CFD (Pennaraptorans): These dinosaurs developed the long folding forelimbs and powerful chest muscles, perhaps initially for increased predatory reach. However, they also evolved broader feathers (perhaps after that initial forelimb increase): maybe in part for brooding, maybe in part for display, maybe in part for WAIR (at least on the arms, if not the tail). Certainly the equipment for limited WAIR is present at this phase. The modifications of the hindlimb (from a femur-to-tail driven system to a knee-flexion one) also occurs at this phase: is it possibly associated with WAIR?
- Oviraptorosaurs represent animals that might have used WAIR and CFD as juveniles, but certainly not as adults. Additionally, their hindlimbs show no real branch-grasping ability.
- Phase III: Tree-Dwelling Limited Fliers (Basal eumaniraptorans): A decrease in size, increase of arm length, increase of the arm and tail feathers, development of the leg feathers, modifications of the tail, and development of possibly tree-perching specializations (grasping toes and foot claws) suggest a change in life habits. These dinosaurs may have more routinely used WAIR and CFD, even into adult phases for small bodied taxa. The increased wing surface suggests the possibility for flight, although much simpler than later bird flight. Elongate leg feathers may have helped the dinosaurs steer during a dive, just as today some raptorial birds use them to help aim when diving for prey; similarly, the modified eumaniraptoran tail may have helped as a dynamic stabilizer in flight (as well as on the ground, or while in the trees).
- Basal deinonychosaurs and basal avialians (i.e., those outside of the derived group Ornithothoraces; in other words, Jurassic forms such as as Anchiornis and Archaeopteryx, and primitive Cretaceous ones such as Jeholornis, omnivoropterygids, and confuciusornithids) represent this phase. Larger advanced deinonychosaurs would have necessarily been flightless, but as juveniles they might have still been able to use WAIR (and even had limited flight?) and CFD. Note that basal "birds" like Archaeopteryx, Jeholornis, omnivoropterygids, and confuciusornithids fit within this phase: there is no compelling evidence that they were any better at flight than were the dromaeosaurids Microraptor and Rahonavis, the troodontid Anchiornis, etc. Indeed the shape of their shoulder joints may have precluded actually complex flapping flight.
- Phase IV: Flapping Flight (Basal ornithothoracines): Primitive ornithothoracines like enantiornthines show specializations such as smaller body size and the alula suggesting increased ability to fly. These were almost certainly powered fliers, but still not of modern bird (i.e., avian) flight ability: they lacked the tail fan; they still had long leg feathers; they had smaller pectoral muscles; and so forth.
- Phase V (or maybe Phase IV, Part B): Specialized Tail Steering (Basal euornithines): As above, but development of the tail fan suggests much greater aerial ability and landing sophistication. The loss of the long leg feathers seems to coincide with the evolution of the tail fan, suggesting that as the latter developed, the former was no longer needed. (Modern birds lack long leg feathers, with some exceptions like eagles that need very precise diving ability).
- Flightless Patagopteryx would have had ancestors of this phase.
- Phase VI: Modern bird flight (Basal carinates): Modern style bird flight with powerful pectoral muscles may have been present only at Carinatae, and thus perhaps first appeared only in the Late Cretaceous.
- The flightless members of the hesperornithines would be descendants of this phase
Why did Aves Survive the K/Pg?
People often note that birds--and only birds--among the dinosaurs survived the K/Pg extinction. But we can actually refine that. It is Aves--and only Aves--that survived. Other groups of Mesozoic birds, such as Ichthyornis and its kin, hesperornithines, and the diverse enantiornithines, did not survive. What makes the toothless birds different?
One possibility, of course, is that it was just luck. That is actually a difficult hypothesis to disprove (as it basically requires us to have access to alternate histories, to see if Aves goes extinct more or less often than Enantiornithes in these different timelines.)
However, there are some reasonable speculations as to why Aves might have survived while its close kin did not:
- One observation is that most of the enantiornithines present in the latest Cretaceous seem to have fed from the terrestrial ecosystem, while the early branches of Aves include many taxa that fed at or near the shoreline. As we saw in the K/Pg lecture, the terrestrial realm was really devastated by the "Easy Bake Oven", global forest collapse, and impact winter, so perhaps the land birds simply didn't have enough food. In contrast, benthic communities of marine organisms did fairly well; that means food for the shore birds may have washed up onto beaches with sufficient amount to keep the lineage going. In this scenario, the fact that ichthyornithines and hesperornithines were more specifically fish (that is, nekton) feeders may have been significant, as the nekton got clobbered more than the benthic realm.
- A related model considers the land-feeding members of Aves. With their toothless beaks, it may be that these birds were better adapted at accessing seeds, worms, grubs, and other food in the shallow layers of the soil, whereas toothed bird were mostly eating the animals and plant above the soil. In an analogy the marine realm extinctions, the above-soil food (equivalent to the nekton) suffered more than the in-the-soil (the "land infauna"), so the toothless probers of the latter had access to a "pantry" their toothy kin did not.
- Finally, one recent speculation has to do with nesting. The evidence is fairly good that the basal branches of Aves were all ground nesters. In contrast, this model proposes that enantiornthines were tree nesters (although to be fair we do not have much knowledge of enantiornithine nests yet.) So with the global forest collapse it might be that the toothed birds simply lost their nesting habitat, and so failed to reproduce at sufficient numbers.
Whatever the case, the last part of the great Dinosauria clade to survive was among the most humble. Yet this lineage would diversify to become the most successful group (at least in terms of species numbers) of all the tetrapods.
Here are some relevant videos:
Origins of avian flight:
Dinosaurs and feathers:
When birds had teeth:
Last modified: 19 January 2023