Preserved soft anatomy confirms shoulder-powered upstroke of early theropod flyers, reveals enhanced early pygostylian upstroke, and explains early sternum loss

Author:

Pittman Michael1ORCID,Kaye Thomas G.2ORCID,Wang Xiaoli3,Zheng Xiaoting34,Dececchi T. Alexander5ORCID,Hartman Scott A.6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Life Sciences, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China

2. Foundation for Scientific Advancement, Sierra Vista, AZ 85650

3. Institute of Geology and Paleontology, Linyi University, Shandong 276005, China

4. Shandong Tianyu Museum of Nature, Shandong 273300, China

5. Division of Natural Sciences, Mount Marty University, Yankton, SD 57078

6. Department of Integrative Biology, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, WI 53706-1692

Abstract

Anatomy of the first flying feathered dinosaurs, modern birds and crocodylians, proposes an ancestral flight system divided between shoulder and chest muscles, before the upstroke muscles migrated beneath the body. This ancestral flight system featured the dorsally positioned deltoids and supracoracoideus controlling the upstroke and the chest-bound pectoralis controlling the downstroke. Preserved soft anatomy is needed to contextualize the origin of the modern flight system, but this has remained elusive. Here we reveal the soft anatomy of the earliest theropod flyers preserved as residual skin chemistry covering the body and delimiting its margins. These data provide preserved soft anatomy that independently validate the ancestral theropod flight system. The heavily constructed shoulder and more weakly constructed chest in the early pygostylian Confuciusornis indicated by a preserved body profile, proposes the first upstroke-enhanced flight stroke. Slender ventral body profiles in the early-diverging birds Archaeopteryx and Anchiornis suggest habitual use of the pectoralis could not maintain the sternum through bone functional adaptations. Increased wing-assisted terrestrial locomotion potentially accelerated sternum loss through higher breathing requirements. Lower expected downstroke requirements in the early thermal soarer Sapeornis could have driven sternum loss through bone functional adaption, possibly encouraged by the higher breathing demands of a Confuciusornis -like upstroke. Both factors are supported by a slender ventral body profile. These data validate the ancestral shoulder/chest flight system and provide insights into novel upstroke-enhanced flight strokes and early sternum loss, filling important gaps in our understanding of the appearance of modern flight.

Funder

Research Grant Council General Research Fund

Taishan Scholars Program of Shandong Province

Faculty of Science & School of Life Sciences, The Chinese University of Hong Kong

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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