Display functions of dinosaur proto-wings before powered flight

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Display functions of dinosaur proto-wings before powered flight

Authors

Park, J.; Son, M.; Kim, W.; Lee, Y.-N.; Lee, S.-i.; Jablonski, P. G.

Abstract

Pennaceous feathers are fundamental to avian flight, yet their early function in non-volant dinosaurs remains unknown. Early-diverging pennaraptorans had simple pennaceous feathers on proto-wings and tails, which were unsuitable for flight but may have enhanced visual signals. However, the visual display hypothesis has not been empirically tested. To address this, we used computer animations of early pennaraptoran displays to measure responses in a well-established animal model of a visually sensitive neural pathway. We show that pennaceous proto-wings and tails enhance the efficiency of motion-based displays across a range of anatomically plausible movements. Integrating these results with comparative and paleontological evidence, we suggest that early pennaceous feathers functioned in diverse signaling contexts and were subsequently exapted for aerodynamic use.

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