The kinematics of feeding and drinking in palaeognathous birds in relation to cranial morphology

Author:

Gussekloo Sander W. S.1,Bout Ron G.1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Biology Leiden, Evolutionary Morphology, Leiden University, Kaiserstraat 63, NL-2311 GP Leiden, The Netherlands

Abstract

SUMMARY Cranial kinesis is an important feature in avian feeding behaviour and involves the transmission of quadrate movement to the upper bill by the Pterygoid–Palatinum Complex (PPC). The PPC in Palaeognathae is remarkably different from that found in Neognathae. In this study we analyse whether the special morphology of the PPC is an adaptation to the feeding behaviour of the Palaeognathae. Behavioural analyses of the rhea Rhea americana showed that the feeding behaviour of the rhea is typical `Catch and Throw' behaviour, independent of the size of the food item. Drinking is achieved by a scooping movement followed by a low-amplitude tip-up phase. During feeding rhynchokinetic movements of the upper bill were observed. However, cranial kinesis was limited and may differ from rhynchokinesis in neognathes as a clear bending zone seemed absent. Since the movement patterns are considered very similar to the basic feeding behaviour in neognathous birds it is concluded that the specific morphology of the PPC is not the result of specific functional demands from palaeognathous feeding behaviour.

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Insect Science,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Aquatic Science,Physiology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference54 articles.

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2. Bledsoe, A. H. (1988). A phylogenetic analysis of postcranial skeletal characters of the ratite birds. Ann. Carnegie Mus.57,73-90.

3. Bock, W. J. (1963). The cranial evidence for Ratite affinities. Proceedings of the XIIIth International Ornithological Congress (ed. C. G. Sibley, J. J. Hickey and M. B. Hickey), pp. 39-54. Baton Rouge, FL: American Ornithologists' Union.

4. Bock, W. J. (1964). Kinetics of the avian skull. J. Morphol.114,1-42.

5. Bramble, D. and Wake, D. B. (1985). Feeding mechanisms of lower tetrapods. In Functional Vertebrate Morphology (ed. M. Hildebrand, D. Bramble, K. Liem, and D. B. Wake), pp. 230-261. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

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