The Origin of Aves
The
discovery that birds evolved from small carnivorous dinosaurs of the
Late Jurassic was made possible by recently discovered fossils from China,
South America, and other countries, as well as by looking at old museum
specimens from new perspectives and with new methods. The hunt for the
ancestors of living birds began with a specimen of Archaeopteryx, the
first known bird, discovered in the early 1860s. Like birds, it had feathers
along its arms and tail, but unlike living birds, it also had teeth and a long
bony tail. Furthermore, many of the bones in Archaeopteryx's hands,
shoulder girdles, pelvis, and feet were distinct, not fused and reduced as they
are in living birds.
In the 1970s,
paleontologists noticed that Archaeopteryx shared unique
features with small carnivorous dinosaurs
called theropods. All the dinosaur groups on this evogram, except the
ornithischian dinosaurs, are theropods. Based on their shared features,
scientists reasoned that perhaps the theropods were the ancestors of birds.
When paleontologists built evolutionary trees to study the question, they were
even more convinced. The birds are simply a twig on the dinosaurs' branch of
the tree of life.
As birds evolved from these theropod
dinosaurs, many of their features were modified. However, it's important to
remember that the animals were not "trying" to be birds in any sense.
In fact, the more closely we look, the more obvious it is that the suite of
features that characterize birds evolved through a complex series of steps and
served different functions along the way.
Take feathers, for
example. Small theropods related to Compsognathus (e.g., Sinosauropteryx)
probably evolved the first feathers. These short, hair-like feathers grew on
their heads, necks, and bodies and provided insulation. The feathers seem
to have had different color patterns as well, although whether these were for
display, camouflage, species recognition, or another function is difficult to
tell.
In theropods even more closely related to birds,
like the oviraptorosaurs, we find several new types of feathers. One is
branched and downy, as pictured below. Others have evolved a central stalk,
with unstructured branches coming off it and its base. Still others (like the
dromaeosaurids and Archaeopteryx) have a vane-like structure in which the barbs are
well-organized and locked together by barbules. This is identical to the
feather structure of living birds.
Another line of evidence comes from changes in the digits of the
dinosaurs leading to birds. The first theropod dinosaurs had hands with small
fifth and fourth digits and a long second digit. As the evogram shows, in the
theropod lineage that would
eventually lead to birds, the fifth digit (e.g., as seen in Coelophysoids) and
then the fourth (e.g., as seen in Allosaurids) were completely lost. The wrist
bones underlying the first and second digits consolidated and took on a
semicircular form that allowed the hand to rotate sideways against the forearm.
This eventually allowed birds' wing joints to move in a way that creates thrust
for flight.
The functions of feathers as they evolved have long been debated.
As we have seen, the first, simplest, hair-like feathers obviously served an
insulatory function. But in later theropods, such as some oviraptorosaurs, the
feathers on the arms and hands are long, even though the forelimbs themselves
are short. What did these animals do with long feathers on short arms? One
suggestion comes from some remarkable fossils of oviraptorosaurs preserved in
the Cretaceous sediments of the Gobi Desert. The skeleton of the animal is
hunched up on a nest of eggs, like a brooding chicken. The hands are spread out
over the eggs as if to shelter them. So perhaps these feathers served the
function of warming the eggs and shielding them from harm.
Birds
after Archaeopteryx continued evolving in some of the same
directions as their theropod ancestors. Many of their bones were reduced and
fused, which may have helped increase the efficiency of flight. Similarly, the
bone walls became even thinner, and the feathers became longer and their vanes
asymmetrical, probably also improving flight. The bony tail was reduced to a
stump, and a spray of feathers at the tail eventually took on the function of
improving stability and maneuverability. The wishbone, which was present in
non-bird dinosaurs, became stronger and more elaborate, and the bones of the
shoulder girdle evolved to connect to the breastbone, anchoring the flight
apparatus of the forelimb. The breastbone itself became larger, and evolved a
central keel along the midline of the breast which served to anchor the flight
muscles. The arms evolved to be longer than the legs, as the main form of
locomotion switched from running to flight, and teeth were lost repeatedly in
various lineages of early birds. The ancestor of all living birds lived
sometime in the Late Cretaceous, and in the 65 million years since the extinction of the rest of
the dinosaurs, this ancestral lineage diversified into the major groups of
birds alive today.
Archaeopteryx
lithographica was said as ancestor of bird for some reason:
1. long legs,
2. 3 fingers with claws and teeth
3. Chin like a small theropod dinosaur
As well as the tail
extends from the tail bone as belonging to a dinosaur.
On
January 2013, researchers found bird fossil in China. They found fossil become
great evidence of bird origin. The fossil is 30 cm, has feather, can not fly
because the wings is too small and bone structure is not enable to fly. It is
known that the fossil is Eosinopteryx
that life in Earth 145million years ago, older than Archaeopteryx that life in Earth 120-130million
years ago.
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