Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Earth Science News .




EARLY EARTH
How dinosaur arms turned into bird wings
by Staff Writers
Santiago, Chile (SPX) Oct 01, 2014


File image.

Although we now appreciate that birds evolved from a branch of the dinosaur family tree, a crucial adaptation for flight has continued to puzzle evolutionary biologists. During the millions of years that elapsed, wrists went from straight to bent and hyperflexible, allowing birds to fold their wings neatly against their bodies when not flying.

How this happened has been the subject of much debate, with substantial disagreement between developmental biologists, who study how the wings of modern birds develop in the growing embryo, and palaeontologists who study the bones of dinosaurs and early birds. A resolution to this impasse is now provided by an exciting new study publishing on September 30 in PLOS Biology.

Underlying this striking evolutionary transformation change is a halving in the number of wrist bones, but developmental biologists and palaeontologists have different names for most of them, and seldom agree on the correspondence between specific dinosaur bones and those of their bird descendants. Indeed, each field has radically different data sources, methods, and research objectives, talking little to each other.

The critical advance made in the new study involved combining these two strands of research. Using an interdisciplinary approach, the lab run by Alexander Vargas at the University of Chile has re-examined fossils stored at several museum collections, while at the same time collecting new developmental data from seven different species of modern birds.

Joao Botelho, a Brazilian student in Vargas' lab, developed a revolutionary new technique that allows him to study specific proteins in 3D embryonic skeletons. By combining these data from both fossils and embryos, the research team has made a major step forward in clarifying how the bird wrist evolved.

From early dinosaur ancestors with as many as nine wrist bones, birds have only kept four during the course of evolution, but which of the original bones are they? The identity of each of these bones was debated.

For instance, the late Yale professor John Ostrom famously pointed out in the 1970's that the wrists of both birds and bird-like dinosaurs possess a very similar, half-moon shaped bone called the semilunate, and that this bone resulted from the merging of two bones present in dinosaurs. This formed part of Ostrom's then-controversial argument that birds descended from dinosaurs. However, the failure of developmental biologists to confirm this raised doubts that it was the same bone, and even that birds came from dinosaurs.

Now, the new data obtained by the Vargas lab has revealed the first developmental evidence that the bird semilunate was formed by the fusion of the two dinosaur bones. They go on to show that another bone - the pisiform - was lost in bird-like dinosaurs, but then re-acquired in the early evolution of birds, probably as an adaptation for flight, where it allows transmission of force on the downstroke while restricting flexibility on the upstroke. Combined, the fossil and developmental data provide a compelling scenario for a rare case of evolutionary reversal.

The study by the Vargas lab also settled the identity of the other two bones of the bird wrist, which were commonly misidentified in both fields.

This emphasizes the downsides of not integrating all data sources, and reveals a situation perhaps akin to that of astronomy and experimental physics in the pursuit of cosmology: Together, palaeontology and development can come much closer to telling the whole story of evolution - this integrative approach resolves previous disparities that have challenged the support for the dinosaur-bird link and reveals previously undetected processes, including loss of bones, fusion of bones, and re-evolution of a transiently lost bone.

Botelho JF, Ossa-Fuentes L, Soto-Acuna S, Smith-Paredes D, Nunez-Leon D, et al. (2014) New Developmental Evidence Clarifies the Evolution of Wrist Bones in the Dinosaur-Bird Transition. PLoS Biol 12(9): e1001957. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1001957

.


Related Links
University of Chile
Explore The Early Earth at TerraDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle




Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News





EARLY EARTH
Tooth lodged in thighbone evidence of ancient dino struggle
Knoxville, Tenn. (UPI) Sep 29, 2014
Paleontologists have long assumed that semiaquatic dinosaurs and land-based predators mostly kept their distance from each other, preferring to avoid conflict or interaction of any sort. But a new discovery by researchers at the University of Tennessee and Virginia Tech - a tooth lodged in an ancient dino thighbone - suggests these predators may have faced off regularly. The tooth bel ... read more


EARLY EARTH
Predicting landslides with light

IS pillaging Iraqi artefacts, UNESCO warns

Japan, Mexico to join UN peacekeeping

Germany to host conference on Syrian refugees

EARLY EARTH
EIAST launches its Advanced Aerial Systems Program

Space debris expert warns of increasing CubeSat collision risk

France taps Thales for radar antenna research project

Fed Up With Federal Inaction, States Act Alone on Cap-and-Trade

EARLY EARTH
600-year-old canoe helps explain migration from East Polynesia to New Zealand

Shape up quickly - applies to fish too

Ireland narrowing wave energy field

Earth's water is older than the sun

EARLY EARTH
New mechanism reveals how molecules become trapped in ice

Young superheros call for protection of Chile's glaciers

Sea levels rose 5 meters a century at end of last 5 ice ages

Arctic sea ice helps remove CO2 from the atmosphere

EARLY EARTH
China's Ningxia matures as a quality wine producer

Ex-rubber tapper Silva out to land Brazil presidency

Can genetic engineering help food crops better tolerate drought?

Sri Lanka seeks to trademark cinnamon spice success

EARLY EARTH
France declares 'natural disaster' in flood-hit towns

Fears over fresh eruption cancel Japan volcano search

Mount St. Helens shows signs of awakening

31 dead in Japan volcano eruption

EARLY EARTH
Obama maintains child soldier sanctions against Myanmar

C.Africa president calls for lifting UN arms embargo

Whistleblower phone app seeks to outsmart corruption

Gunmen kidnap Chinese national in central Nigeria: police

EARLY EARTH
Ancient genome from southern Africa throws light on our origins

New study explains the brain of multitaskers

Politics Divide Coastal Residents' Views of Environment

Stone Age site challenges assumptions about human technology




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement All images and articles appearing on Space Media Network have been edited or digitally altered in some way. Any requests to remove copyright material will be acted upon in a timely and appropriate manner. Any attempt to extort money from Space Media Network will be ignored and reported to Australian Law Enforcement Agencies as a potential case of financial fraud involving the use of a telephonic carriage device or postal service.