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Quantitative analysis of stem-palaeognath flight capabilities sheds light on ratite dispersal and flight loss.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Lithornithids are an assemblage of Palaeogene fossil birds thought to represent stem-group members of Palaeognathae. Among extant palaeognaths, which include flightless ratites such as ostriches, only tinamous can fly, though only in anaerobic bursts. Despite their limited dispersal capabilities, the phylogenetic interrelationships and geographic distributions of palaeognaths imply that their early relatives were capable of long-distance dispersal, although quantitative skeletal evidence has not been applied to this question. We investigate the flight capabilities and ecology of the Palaeogene lithornithid Lithornis promiscuus using a three-dimensional geometric morphometric dataset spanning the avian crown group. Our models reject the hypothesis that Lithornis would have relied on tinamou-like burst flight, and show that its sternum morphology is consistent with a range of aerobic, flapping flight styles-closely resembling those of many extant birds exhibiting pronounced dispersal capabilities. Our results are consistent with inferences from lithornithid wing shape, supporting the hypothesis that at least some stem palaeognaths were capable of long-distance flight, helping to clarify the origins of the transoceanic distributions of extant flightless ratites.

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Journal Title

Biol Lett

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1744-9561
1744-957X

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Publisher

The Royal Society

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
MRC (MR/X015130/1)