Beyond the beak: brain size and allometry in avian craniofacial evolution

Birds exhibit an enormous variety of beak shapes. Such remarkable variation, however, has distracted research from other important aspects of their skull evolution, the nature of which has been little explored. Key aspects of avian skull variation appear to be qualitatively similar to those of mamma...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Marugán-Lobon, J, Nebreda, SM, Navalón, G, Benson, RBJ
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021
_version_ 1797107712554696704
author Marugán-Lobon, J
Nebreda, SM
Navalón, G
Benson, RBJ
author_facet Marugán-Lobon, J
Nebreda, SM
Navalón, G
Benson, RBJ
author_sort Marugán-Lobon, J
collection OXFORD
description Birds exhibit an enormous variety of beak shapes. Such remarkable variation, however, has distracted research from other important aspects of their skull evolution, the nature of which has been little explored. Key aspects of avian skull variation appear to be qualitatively similar to those of mammals, encompassing variation in the degree of cranial vaulting, cranial base flexure, and the proportions and orientations of the occipital and facial regions. The evolution of these traits has been studied intensively in mammals under the Spatial Packing Hypothesis (SPH), an architectural constraint so-called because the general anatomical organization and development of such skull parts makes them evolve predictably in response to changes in relative brain size. Such SPH predictions account for the different appearances of skull configurations across species, either in having longer or shorter faces, and caudally or ventrally oriented occiputs, respectively. This pattern has been morphometrically and experimentally proven in mammals but has not been examined in birds or other tetrapods, and so its generality remains unknown. We explored the SPH in an interspecific sample of birds using three-dimensional geometric morphometrics. Our results show that the dominant trend of evolutionary variation in the skull of crown-group birds can be predicted by the SPH, involving concomitant changes in the face, the cranial vault and the basicranium, and with striking similarities to craniofacial variation among mammals. Although craniofacial variation is significantly affected by allometry, these allometric effects are independent of the influence of the SPH on skull morphology, as are any effects of volumetric encephalization. Our results, therefore, validate the hypothesis that a general architectural constraint underlies skull homoplasy evolution of cranial morphology among avian clades, and possibly between birds and mammals, but they downplay encephalization and allometry as the only factors involved.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T07:19:53Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:75cb51c1-cb3e-4a04-bf4c-6d7d2ac8da57
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T07:19:53Z
publishDate 2021
publisher Wiley
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:75cb51c1-cb3e-4a04-bf4c-6d7d2ac8da572022-09-26T09:06:54ZBeyond the beak: brain size and allometry in avian craniofacial evolutionJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:75cb51c1-cb3e-4a04-bf4c-6d7d2ac8da57EnglishSymplectic ElementsWiley2021Marugán-Lobon, JNebreda, SMNavalón, GBenson, RBJBirds exhibit an enormous variety of beak shapes. Such remarkable variation, however, has distracted research from other important aspects of their skull evolution, the nature of which has been little explored. Key aspects of avian skull variation appear to be qualitatively similar to those of mammals, encompassing variation in the degree of cranial vaulting, cranial base flexure, and the proportions and orientations of the occipital and facial regions. The evolution of these traits has been studied intensively in mammals under the Spatial Packing Hypothesis (SPH), an architectural constraint so-called because the general anatomical organization and development of such skull parts makes them evolve predictably in response to changes in relative brain size. Such SPH predictions account for the different appearances of skull configurations across species, either in having longer or shorter faces, and caudally or ventrally oriented occiputs, respectively. This pattern has been morphometrically and experimentally proven in mammals but has not been examined in birds or other tetrapods, and so its generality remains unknown. We explored the SPH in an interspecific sample of birds using three-dimensional geometric morphometrics. Our results show that the dominant trend of evolutionary variation in the skull of crown-group birds can be predicted by the SPH, involving concomitant changes in the face, the cranial vault and the basicranium, and with striking similarities to craniofacial variation among mammals. Although craniofacial variation is significantly affected by allometry, these allometric effects are independent of the influence of the SPH on skull morphology, as are any effects of volumetric encephalization. Our results, therefore, validate the hypothesis that a general architectural constraint underlies skull homoplasy evolution of cranial morphology among avian clades, and possibly between birds and mammals, but they downplay encephalization and allometry as the only factors involved.
spellingShingle Marugán-Lobon, J
Nebreda, SM
Navalón, G
Benson, RBJ
Beyond the beak: brain size and allometry in avian craniofacial evolution
title Beyond the beak: brain size and allometry in avian craniofacial evolution
title_full Beyond the beak: brain size and allometry in avian craniofacial evolution
title_fullStr Beyond the beak: brain size and allometry in avian craniofacial evolution
title_full_unstemmed Beyond the beak: brain size and allometry in avian craniofacial evolution
title_short Beyond the beak: brain size and allometry in avian craniofacial evolution
title_sort beyond the beak brain size and allometry in avian craniofacial evolution
work_keys_str_mv AT maruganlobonj beyondthebeakbrainsizeandallometryinaviancraniofacialevolution
AT nebredasm beyondthebeakbrainsizeandallometryinaviancraniofacialevolution
AT navalong beyondthebeakbrainsizeandallometryinaviancraniofacialevolution
AT bensonrbj beyondthebeakbrainsizeandallometryinaviancraniofacialevolution