Artículos de revistas
Unique caudal plumage of Jeholornis and complex tail evolution in early birds
Fecha
2013-10Registro en:
O'Connor, Jingmai; Wang, Xiaoli; Sullivan, Corwin; Zheng, Xiaoting; Tubaro, Pablo Luis; et al.; Unique caudal plumage of Jeholornis and complex tail evolution in early birds; National Academy Of Sciences; Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America; 110; 43; 10-2013; 17404-17408
0027-8424
Autor
O'Connor, Jingmai
Wang, Xiaoli
Sullivan, Corwin
Zheng, Xiaoting
Tubaro, Pablo Luis
Zhang, Xiaomei
Zhou, Zhonghe
Resumen
The Early Cretaceous bird Jeholornis was previously only known to have a distally restricted ornamental frond of tail feathers. We describe a previously unrecognized fan-shaped tract of feathers situated dorsal to the proximal caudal vertebrae. The position and morphology of these feathers is reminiscent of the specialized upper tail coverts observed in males of some sexually dimorphic neornithines. As in the neornithine tail, the unique “two-tail” plumage in Jeholornis probably evolved as the result of complex interactions between natural and sexual selective pressures and served both aerodynamic and ornamental functions. We suggest that the proximal fan would have helped to streamline the body and reduce drag whereas the distal frond was primarily ornamental. Jeholornis reveals that tail evolution was complex and not a simple progression from frond to fan.