THE LIFE STYLE OF ARCHAEOPTERYX (AVES)
Resumen
The lack of modern flight adaptations and flight maneuverability makes both ground-up take off and arboreal foraging of Archaeopteryx extremely improbable (even if trees were present in a part of its habitat). A combination of heights-down take-off and ground foraging necessitated a swift terrestrial escape to a launching site and probably climbing elevated objects. Archaeopteryx does not show any distinctive cursorial specialization and the leg intramembral ratios suggest a slow-pace to multimode (i.e., using various gaits) forager, similar in behavior to today's tinamous and most galliforms. Archaeopteryx was an escape runner, not a cursorial predator. The limbs of Archaeopteryx and (non-avian) theropods reveal substantial functional differences, which make their similarities even more likely to be synapomorphic.
KEY WORDS. Archaeopteryx. Birds. Paleobiological reconstruction. Flight. Locomotion. Foraging. Jurassic.
Descargas
Publicado
Número
Sección
Licencia
Los/las autores/as conservan los derechos de autor/a y garantizan a la revista el derecho de ser la primera publicación del trabajo licenciado bajo una licencia CC Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 que permite a otros/as compartir el trabajo con el reconocimiento de la autoría y de la publicación inicial en esta revista.