Key Laboratory of Vertebrate Evolution and Human Origins of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
CAS Center for Excellence in Life and Paleoenvironment, Beijing, China.
J Anat. 2021 Nov;239(5):1066-1074. doi: 10.1111/joa.13487. Epub 2021 Jun 16.
While the morphology and evolution of the quadrate among early birds and through the evolutionary origin of birds is not well known, we add to knowledge about that past diversity through description of the morphology of the quadrate in the unusually elongate skull of the Cretaceous enantiornithine bird Longipteryx chaoyangensis. The lateral and caudal surfaces of the quadrate are well exposed in two specimens revealing morphologies typical of early birds and their dinosaurian close relatives like a small otic head and two mandibular condyles. However, both skeletons exhibit quadrates with a unique, enlarged lateral crest that has not been previously described among Mesozoic birds. It is possible that the rostral surface of this lateral expansion served as the origination site for enlarged jaw musculature in a manner similar to the enlarged subcapitular tubercle in extant galloanserine birds. The caudally concave surface of the quadrate likely reflects some aspect of cranial pneumaticity, with its shape and position reminiscent of quadrates found in close non-avialan maniraptoran relatives. It is possible that this lateral crest has a wider distribution among enantiornithines and other early birds and that the crest has been misidentified as the orbital process in some more damaged specimens. In addition, the enlarged lateral mandibular condyle (relative to the medial condyle) differs from the condition typically reported among enantiornithines and could indicate a difference in jaw function or mechanics in this bird with an elongated rostrum, or simply misinterpretations of morphology. Further examination of the quadrate in temporally early and phylogenetically stemward birds, along with their close outgroups, could greatly impact the study of several different aspects of bird biology including assessment of phylogenetic relationships, interpretation of the function and kinematics of the skull, reconstruction of foraging paleoecology, and evolution of skull morphological diversity among Mesozoic birds.
虽然早期鸟类的方骨形态和演化以及鸟类的进化起源还不是很清楚,但通过描述长有长头骨的白垩纪反鸟类长羽盗龙(Longipteryx chaoyangensis)的方骨形态,我们增加了对过去多样性的了解。在两个标本中,方骨的外侧和后侧表面都很好地暴露出来,显示出典型的早期鸟类和它们的恐龙近亲的形态,如小耳状头部和两个下颌关节突。然而,这两个骨架都表现出一个独特的、增大的外侧嵴,这在中生代鸟类中还没有被描述过。这种外侧扩张的头部表面可能是为了增大颌部肌肉而起源的,这种方式类似于现存的鸵鸟类鸟类中增大的副头嵴。方骨的尾侧凹面可能反映了某种颅腔充气的情况,其形状和位置让人联想到在亲缘关系密切的非鸟兽脚类恐龙中发现的方骨。这种外侧嵴可能在反鸟类和其他早期鸟类中分布更广泛,而且在一些更受损的标本中,它可能被错误地识别为眶突。此外,增大的外侧下颌关节突(相对于内侧关节突)与反鸟类中通常报告的情况不同,这可能表明这种长吻鸟类的颌部功能或力学机制存在差异,或者只是对方骨形态的误解。进一步研究在时间上更早、系统发育上更基础的鸟类及其近亲外群的方骨,可以极大地影响对鸟类生物学的几个不同方面的研究,包括评估系统发育关系、解释头骨的功能和运动学、重建觅食古生态学,以及中生代鸟类头骨形态多样性的演化。