Key Laboratory of Vertebrate Evolution and Human Origins, Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
CAS Center for Excellence in Life and Paleoenvironment, Beijing, China.
Elife. 2022 Mar 31;11:e76086. doi: 10.7554/eLife.76086.
The morphology of the pectoral girdle, the skeletal structure connecting the wing to the body, is a key determinant of flight capability, but in some respects is poorly known among stem birds. Here, the pectoral girdles of the Early Cretaceous birds and are reconstructed for the first time based on computed tomography and three-dimensional visualization, revealing key morphological details that are important for our understanding of early-flight evolution. exhibits a double articulation system (widely present in non-enantiornithine pennaraptoran theropods including crown birds), which involves, alongside the main scapula-coracoid joint, a small subsidiary joint, though variation exists with respect to the shape and size of the main and subsidiary articular contacts in non-enantiornithine pennaraptorans. This double articulation system contrasts with in which a spatially restricted scapula-coracoid joint is formed by a single set of opposing articular surfaces, a feature also present in other members of Enantiornithines, a major clade of stem birds known only from the Cretaceous. The unique single articulation system may reflect correspondingly unique flight behavior in enantiornithine birds, but this hypothesis requires further investigation from a functional perspective. Our renderings indicate that both and had a partially closed triosseal canal (a passage for muscle tendon that plays a key role in raising the wing), and our study suggests that this type of triosseal canal occurred in all known non-euornithine birds except , representing a transitional stage in flight apparatus evolution before the appearance of a fully closed bony triosseal canal as in modern birds. Our study reveals additional lineage-specific variations in pectoral girdle anatomy, as well as significant modification of the pectoral girdle along the line to crown birds. These modifications produced diverse pectoral girdle morphologies among Mesozoic birds, which allowed a commensurate range of capability levels and styles to emerge during the early evolution of flight.
胸带的形态,即连接翅膀和身体的骨骼结构,是飞行能力的关键决定因素,但在某些方面,在原始鸟类中知之甚少。在这里,首次基于计算机断层扫描和三维可视化重建了早白垩世鸟类 和 的胸带,揭示了对理解早期飞行进化至关重要的关键形态细节。 表现出双关节系统(在包括冠群鸟类在内的非鸟兽脚类手盗龙中广泛存在),除了主要的肩胛骨-乌喙骨关节外,还涉及一个小副关节,尽管在非鸟兽脚类手盗龙中,主关节和副关节的形状和大小存在差异。这种双关节系统与 形成对比, 中形成的肩胛-乌喙骨关节由一组单一的相对关节面组成,这一特征也存在于其他手盗龙类群中,手盗龙类群是仅来自白垩纪的一个主要的原始鸟类分支。独特的单关节系统可能反映了在手盗龙鸟类中相应独特的飞行行为,但这一假说需要从功能角度进一步研究。我们的渲染表明, 和 都有部分封闭的三骨管(肌肉腱的通道,在提起翅膀方面起着关键作用),我们的研究表明,这种类型的三骨管存在于除 之外的所有已知非鸟兽脚类中,代表了在现代鸟类中完全封闭的骨质三骨管出现之前,飞行器官进化的一个过渡阶段。我们的研究揭示了胸带解剖结构的其他谱系特异性变化,以及沿冠群鸟类进化线对胸带的显著改造。这些改造在中生代鸟类中产生了多样化的胸带形态,这使得在飞行的早期进化中出现了多样化的能力水平和风格。