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Lecture 9

The Evolution of Birds and the Origin of Flight

Jan 30, 2002

Key concepts:

Phyletic evolution

geological time scale

continental drift/plate tectonics

fossil record

Archaeopteryx lithographica

I.        Where did birds come from?

             Phyletic evolution -

                         Species limits (totally subjective) speciation/extinction (probably 100,000 species of birds)—Gradual evolution or the punctuated equilibria of S. J. Gould and colleague?

            Modern terrestrial vertebrates share common ancestors about 270 mya

                         mammals branched off early from therapsid reptiles, minor players on the stage while dinosaurs ruled

                         thecodonts gave rise to dinosaurs, birds, crocodiles (early forms were arboreal!), and dinosaurs.  Where did the birds branch off?  Get to that later.

II.      Set the stage chronologically:

            Cenozoic Era: (age of birds and mammals)

            Quaternary Period:

                        Recent Epoch (0.01 mya = 10,000 ybp)

                        Pleistocene (1.5-3.5 mya) (cooler climates)

            Tertiary Period: (climate warm from pole to pole)

                        Pliocene

                        Miocene

                        Oligocene

                        Eocene (53 - 37 mya)            adeus Gondwanaland, hello Himalayas

                        Paleocene (65 - 53 mya)

            Mesozoic Era:

                        Cretaceous -- Atlantic opens up 100 mya-Laurasia & Gondwanaland

                        Jurassic (180-190 mya)

                        Triassic (230 mya)  --  Pangea

            Paleozoic Era:

                        Permian (270 mya)

III.    The Characters:

                       A. L. Wegener - german meteorologist proposed continental drift -met with resistance because the facts were convincing, but there was no mechanism that could explain them - Not until plate tectonics offered the mechanism was the idea accepted

             Hutchinson’s quote “never believe a theory unless there are facts to support it and never believe a fact unless there is a theory underlying it.” c.f. “every fact is useful but no fact is useful unless it is used” -

             Likewise, Darwin’s theory lacked the mechanism (genetics)

             Gregor Mendel Born Czech Republic in 1843 entered the Augustinian monastery at Brunn (now Brno). He began studies of peas in 11856 - three years before Darwin published his theory, but not until 20th century were the theories wed in what is called the modern synthesis.

 IV.   Clear from modern birds and reptiles that they share common ancestors:      

             Nucleated red blood cells

             6 features of skull alone, including:

                         single occipital condyle

                         ear (single) and jaw bones (many)

                         articulation of lower jaw onto quadrate

                         sclerotic ring supports eye

                         laterally expanded braincase

                         ankle location

             scales on legs (in fact feathers are just fancy scales)

             similar yolked egg

             female birds and some reptiles are heterogametic sex (ZW)

V.      The fossil record:

Solnhofen limestone/shales (near Munich) - used by Romans for paving roads and roofing, with the advent of printing - fine grain made them valuable for lithographic plates (n.b. “Lithographic” comes from stone).  Quarrymen started paying attention to slabs for lithographic quality and found fossils.  If not for fine-grained nature, the feathers would not have made impressions and all these fossils would have gone as reptiles.  Fossil collection was in vogue, so quarrymen collected fossils often making more for sale of fossils than they did from quarrying activities.  Lay collectors were amassing huge collections of fossils, often as speculation.

Hermann von Meyer - found 1st feather in 1861, then 1st Archaeopteryx lithographica a couple of months later.  This was a crow-sized reptile with feathers, which by our modern definition would be a bird, but everything about the skeleton said “reptile.”  

Here’s where the plot thickens - Dr. Haberlein put the fossil up for sale after 3 months and a mad rush was on - The German court wanted it, but a Dr. Wagner of the Munich Museum did not believe Darwinian theory and wanted nothing to do with the fossil.  He published a paper exposing the fossil as a fraud, without ever having seen it!  In 1862 the Brits got the first specimen

6 specimens with skeletal material are known - 1st is in the BM, second (and best) in Berlin.  3 of other 4 were misid’d, one even by von Meyer as pterodactyl, another as Composgnathus, a small Coelosaurian dinosaur common in the area (1 is just a feather).  Last discovered in 1987 on display in Germany, but it has since been removed from public display.  Fortunately John Ostrom studied it - most important for its preservation of one of the toe claws - which is sharply curved, rather than flat - suggesting arboreal habits, rather than cursorial.

VI.   Was Archaeopteryx a theropod or did it evolve from a basal thecodont? - more simply, did birds evolve from dinosaurs or their ancestors?

             Answer depends in large part on hypothesized origin of flight – ground-up or gliding arborealist?

  VII.             THE EVOLUTION OF FEATHERS AND FLIGHT:

                                    The design of a flying machine

              Key Concepts:

                        evolution as tinkering - not engineering

                        evolutionary redundancy

                        adaptive radiation

                        ecological niche - nature abhors a vacuum

 

              how does any new trait evolve -

                        redundancy, other purpose

                                     No master plan

                        gradualistic, each small step confers an advantage

                                     Richard Dawkins said, "...An animal can never be strictly adapted to its present environment.  It is always adapted to a sum of past environments in which its ancestors survived.  More strictly still, the sum is a weighted sum, with the weights diminishing as we go back in time."  Nat. Hist 9/95 - e.g. infants foot curl response.

 

Lecture 10

1 February 2002

 Chapter 2 in Gill

             Modern biodiversity (define) results from phyletic evolution, speciation, & extinction

            Feathers from scales. Feathers = keratin in a protein matrix. Not the same as in modern reptilian scales, so some biochemical switch long ago.

            What’s the adaptive value of proto-feathers?

                        Thermoregulation? Locomotion? Displays? (overhead)

VIII.           Evolution of flight:

              Could Archaeopteryx fly? 

                          Assymetrical vanes on feathers says yes!

                          Lack of keeled sternum,

                                    but strong furcula

                                                 but pigeons with cut supracoracoideus tendon can fly, just can’t take off.

              Arboreal or Cursorial?

                          did flight evolve from animals that were gliding in trees?

                          escape from predators

                          prey capture

                          reduce injury

                          virtually all animals showing precursor to flight do so from trees:

                          Flying squirrels

                          snakes

                          lemurs

                          marsupials

                          frogs    

             Ostrom and almost all extant paleontologists argue that it was a theropod, cursorial origin of flight. Ostrom revived an old hypothesis (of Huxley) that the protobirds were cursorial predators.

                          feathers developed to help catch prey

                          then aided in leaping up, maneuvering, etc. (overhead)

                          what of sharply curved halux claw? (overhead)

                                     most argue that it implies arboreal habits

Ostrom points to large (turkey-sized) bipedal predators as birds’ ancestors

Feduccia argues they came from reptilian ancestors “basal thecodonts” and similarities between Archaeopteryx and Coelosaurs is a case of convergence.

                        Archaeopteryx lithographica predates Coelosaurs by 70 MM years

                        Paleontologists counter these lines just didn’t evolve much

                        Dinos too big for feathers to have given aerodynamic advantage

                        forelimbs already reduced - would require reversing evolutionary trend

                        rear-directed halux never found in cursorial forms

                        sharply decurved claw on halux is that of an arboreal form

                        wings of Archaeopteryx lithographica like those of modern woodland birds

            birds became secondarily bipedal when forelimbs were shifted to flight--those that took to the ground resemble dinos because of biophysical constraints inherent in bipedalism

            Dino advocates are “strapped” with the cursorial origin of flight because the potential avian ancestors were large (turkey sized or bigger) and already had short forelimbs (not good for climbing)

            basal archosaurs (thecodonts--not yet dinosaurs) were small, often arboreal, with longer forelimbs.

Feduccia says that cladistics has been adopted to the exclusion of any other approach. The bird-dinosaur link is the “crown jewel of paleontology.”

 Review cladistic method (overhead)

 To most paleontologists, birds are living dinosaurs.

Feduccia warns of the “inherrent dangers of strict adherence to phylogenetic dogma, where, regardless of the evidence, anatomical and functional explanations must fit unerringly into a rigid cladistic framework.”

 The 3-digit hand is an important link between the theropods and birds, BUT in birds it’s digits 1 and 5 that are lost and in dinosaurs it’s 4 and 5! So the bird-dino camp has to invoke a bizarre developmental argument.

Pterosaurs were shown by cladistic analysis to be a sister group of dinosaurs and hence had to be evolved from bipedal forms, but later analyses showed them to be quadripedal.

Feathered dinosaurs? Feduccia discounts all examples.

In one cladistic analysis, of 90 traits used, Feduccia claims none should have been.