作者
Christine Böhmer, Olivia Plateau, Raphäel Cornette, Anick Abourachid
发表日期
2019/5/8
期刊
Royal Society open science
卷号
6
期号
5
页码范围
181588
出版商
The Royal Society
简介
Despite a diversity of about 10 000 extant species, the sophisticated avian ‘body plan’ has not much changed once it was achieved around 160 Ma after the origin of powered flight. All birds are bipedal having wings, a rigid trunk, a short and ossified tail, a three-segmented leg and digitigrade feet. The avian neck, however, has always been regarded as a classic example of high variability ranging from short necks in songbirds to extremely long, serpentine necks in herons. Yet, the wide array of small to very large species makes it difficult to evaluate the actual neck length. Here, we investigate the evolution of the vertebral formulae in the neck of birds and the scaling relationships between skeletal dimensions and body size. Cervical count in birds is strongly related to phylogeny, with only some specialists having an exceptional number of vertebrae in the neck. In contrast with mammals, the length of the cervical …
引用总数
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学术搜索中的文章
C Böhmer, O Plateau, R Cornette, A Abourachid - Royal Society open science, 2019