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Fosil Burung pertama dengan gigi khusus untuk diet
First fossil bird with teeth specialized for tough diet
Date:
January 7,
2013
Source:
Society of Vertebrate Paleontology
Summary:
Beak shape variation in Darwin's finches is a classic
example of evolutionary adaptation, with beaks that vary widely in proportions
and shape, reflecting a diversity of ecologies. While living birds have a beak
to manipulate their food, their fossil bird ancestors had teeth. Now a new
fossil discovery shows some fossil birds evolved teeth adapted for specialized
diets.
.......................
Beak shape variation in Darwin's finches is a classic
example of evolutionary adaptation, with beaks that vary widely in proportions
and shape, reflecting a diversity of ecologies. While living birds have a beak
to manipulate their food, their fossil bird ancestors had teeth. Now a new
fossil discovery shows some fossil birds evolved teeth adapted for specialized
diets.
A study of
the teeth of a new species of early bird, Sulcavis geeorum, published in
the latest issue of the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, suggests
this fossil bird had a durophagous diet, meaning the bird's teeth were capable
of eating prey with hard exoskeletons like insects or crabs. The researchers
believe the teeth of the new specimen greatly increase the known diversity of
tooth shape in early birds, and hints at previously unrecognized ecological
diversity.
Sulcavis
geeorum is an
enantiornithine bird from the Early Cretaceous (121-125 million years ago) of
Liaoning Province, China. Enantiornithine birds are an early group of birds,
and the most numerous birds from the Mesozoic (the time of the dinosaurs). Sulcavis
is the first discovery of a bird with ornamented tooth enamel. The dinosaurs --
from which birds evolved -- are mostly characterized by carnivorous teeth with
special features for eating meat. The enantiornithines are unique among birds
in showing minimal tooth reduction and a diversity of dental patterns. This new
enantiornithine has robust teeth with grooves on the inside surface, which
likely strengthened the teeth against harder food items.
No previous
bird species have preserved ridges, striations, serrated edges, or any other
form of dental ornamentation. "While other birds were losing their teeth,
enantiornithines were evolving new morphologies and dental specializations. We
still don't understand why enantiornithines were so successful in the
Cretaceous but then died out -- maybe differences in diet played a part."
says Jingmai O'Connor, lead author of the new study.
"This
study highlights again how uneven the diversity of birds was during the
Cretaceous. There are many more enantiornithines than any other group of early
birds, each one with its own anatomical specialization." offers study
co-author Luis Chiappe, from Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by Society of Vertebrate Paleontology. Note: Materials may be edited
for content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- O'Connor, J.K., Y. Zhang, L. M. Chiappe, Q. Meng, L. Quanguo, and L. Di. A new enantiornithine from the Yixian formation with the first recognized avian enamel specialization. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 2013; 33 (1): 1-12