Birds of prey constrained in the beak evolution race

How birds’ beaks evolved characteristic shapes to eat different food is a classic example of evolution by natural selection.

However, new research, found this does not apply to all species, and that raptors in particular have not enjoyed this evolutionary flexibility.

Lead author of the study, Dr Jen Bright, said: “Our results show that in birds of prey such as eagles and falcons, the shapes of the skulls change in a predictable way as species increase or decrease in size. The shape of the beak is linked to the shape of the skull, and these birds can’t change one without changing the other.

 

“We think that being able to break this constraint — letting the beak evolve independently from the braincase, may have been a key factor in enabling the rapid and explosive evolution of the thousands of species of songbirds such as Darwin’s finches and Hawaiian honeycreepers.”

The researchers used a method that allowed them to statistically quantify variation in the shape of predatory bird skulls and see how this shape variation compared with size, what the birds ate and how they are related to each other.

“Our research does not cast doubt on Darwin’s ideas, far from it,” said project lead Professor Emily Rayfield. “Instead it demonstrates how evolution has constrained raptor skulls to a particular range of shapes.”

“Basically, if you’re a bird of prey and you’re small, you look like a tiny falcon, and if you’re a bird of prey and you’re large, your skull looks like a vulture,” said co-author Jesus Marugán-Lobón.

Source: Science daily

N.H.Kh

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