assessing arboreal adaptations of bird antecedents testing the ecological setting of the origin of the avian flight stroke树栖鸟类祖先的适应性测试评估生态环境的鸟类飞行起源的中风.pdf
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Assessing Arboreal Adaptations of Bird Antecedents:
Testing the Ecological Setting of the Origin of the Avian
Flight Stroke
T. Alexander Dececchi, Hans C. E. Larsson*
Redpath Museum, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Abstract
The origin of avian flight is a classic macroevolutionary transition with research spanning over a century. Two competing
models explaining this locomotory transition have been discussed for decades: ground up versus trees down. Although it is
impossible to directly test either of these theories, it is possible to test one of the requirements for the trees-down model,
that of an arboreal paravian. We test for arboreality in non-avian theropods and early birds with comparisons to extant
avian, mammalian, and reptilian scansors and climbers using a comprehensive set of morphological characters. Non-avian
theropods, including the small, feathered deinonychosaurs, and Archaeopteryx, consistently and significantly cluster with
fully terrestrial extant mammals and ground-based birds, such as ratites. Basal birds, more advanced than Archaeopteryx,
cluster with extant perching ground-foraging birds. Evolutionary trends immediately prior to the origin of birds indicate
skeletal adaptations opposite that expected for arboreal climbers. Results reject an arboreal capacity for the avian stem
lineage, thus lending no support for the trees-down model. Support for a fully terrestrial ecology and origin of the avian
flight stroke has broad implications for the origin of powered flight for this clade. A terrestrial origin for the avian flight
stroke challenges the need for an intermediate gliding phase, presents the best resolved series of the evolution of
vertebrate powered flight, and may differ fundamentally from the origin of bat and pterosaur flight, whose antecedents
have been postulated to have
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