Department of Biology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Department of Mathematics, and of Computer Science and Engineering, University of North Texas, Denton, TX, USA.
Integr Comp Biol. 2020 Nov 1;60(5):1297-1308. doi: 10.1093/icb/icaa126.
The evolution of wing morphology among birds, and its functional consequences, remains an open question, despite much attention. This is in part because the connection between form and function is difficult to test directly. To address this deficit, in prior work, we used computational modeling and sensitivity analysis to interrogate the impact of altering wing aspect ratio (AR), camber, and Reynolds number on aerodynamic performance, revealing the performance landscapes that avian evolution has explored. In the present work, we used a dataset of three-dimensionally scanned bird wings coupled with the performance landscapes to test two hypotheses regarding the evolutionary diversification of wing morphology associated with gliding flight behavior: (1) gliding birds would exhibit higher wing AR and greater chordwise camber than their non-gliding counterparts; and (2) that two strategies for gliding flight exist, with divergent morphological conformations. In support of our first hypothesis, we found evidence of morphological divergence in both wing AR and camber between gliders and non-gliders, suggesting that wing morphology of birds that utilize gliding flight is under different selective pressures than the wings of non-gliding taxa. Furthermore, we found that these morphological differences also yielded differences in coefficient of lift measured both at the maximum lift to drag ratio and at minimum sinking speed, with gliding taxa exhibiting higher coefficient of lift in both cases. Minimum sinking speed was also lower in gliders than non-gliders. However, contrary to our hypothesis, we found that the maximum ratio of the coefficient of lift to the coefficient of drag differed between gliders and non-gliders. This may point to the need for gliders to maintain high lift capability for takeoff and landing independent of gliding performance or could be due to the divergence in flight styles among gliders, as not all gliders are predicted to optimize either quantity. However, direct evidence for the existence of two morphologically defined gliding flight strategies was equivocal, with only slightly stronger support for an evolutionary model positing separate morphological optima for these strategies than an alternative model positing a single peak. The absence of a clear result may be an artifact of low statistical power owing to a relatively small sample size of gliding flyers expected to follow the "aerial search" strategy.
鸟类翅膀形态的进化及其功能后果仍然是一个悬而未决的问题,尽管已经引起了广泛关注。部分原因是形态和功能之间的联系难以直接测试。为了解决这一不足,在之前的工作中,我们使用计算建模和敏感性分析来探究改变翅膀展弦比(AR)、弯度和雷诺数对空气动力性能的影响,揭示了鸟类进化所探索的性能景观。在本工作中,我们使用了一组三维扫描的鸟类翅膀数据集,并结合性能景观,来检验两个与滑翔飞行行为相关的翅膀形态进化多样化的假设:(1)滑翔鸟类的翅膀 AR 和翼弦弯度比它们的非滑翔对应物更高;(2)存在两种滑翔飞行策略,具有不同的形态构型。支持我们的第一个假设,我们发现滑翔鸟类和非滑翔鸟类的翅膀 AR 和弯度都存在形态差异,这表明利用滑翔飞行的鸟类的翅膀形态受到的选择压力与非滑翔类群的翅膀不同。此外,我们发现这些形态差异还导致了在最大升阻比和最小下沉速度处测量的升力系数的差异,滑翔类群在这两种情况下的升力系数都更高。滑翔鸟类的最小下沉速度也比非滑翔鸟类低。然而,与我们的假设相反,我们发现滑翔鸟类和非滑翔鸟类的最大升力系数与阻力系数之比不同。这可能表明滑翔鸟类需要保持起飞和着陆时的高升力能力,而不依赖于滑翔性能,或者可能是由于滑翔鸟类的飞行方式存在差异,因为并非所有滑翔鸟类都被预测为优化这两个数量。然而,对于存在两种形态定义的滑翔飞行策略的直接证据是模棱两可的,只有略微更强的支持一种进化模型,该模型为这两种策略假设了单独的形态最优解,而不是另一种模型,该模型假设存在一个单一的峰值。缺乏明确的结果可能是由于统计能力较低的人为因素造成的,因为预计遵循“空中搜索”策略的滑翔飞行者的样本量相对较小。