The rhamphotheca of the Eocene pseudo-toothed birds from Antarctica

被引:0
|
作者
Piro, Alejandra [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Hospitaleche, Carolina Acosta [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nacl La Plata, Fac Ciencias Nat & Museo, Div Paleontol Vertebrados, Museo La Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina
[2] Consejo Nacl Invest Cient & Tecn, La Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina
[3] Univ Nacl La Plata, Fac Ciencias Nat & Museo, Div Paleontol Vertebrados, Museo La Plata, Paseo Bosque S-N, La Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina
关键词
Pelagornithidae; James Ross Basin; beak morphology; Paleogene; Antarctic Peninsula; PELAGORNITHIDAE; MIOCENE; AVES;
D O I
10.1080/08912963.2023.2230584
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
The Pelagornithidae are an extinct group of soaring birds that lived all over the world between the early Palaeocene and the Pliocene-Pleistocene and are characterised by the presence of hollow denticles along the tomial edges formed by the expansion of the premaxillary, maxillary, and dentary bones. The presence of distinctive sulci in the upper and lower jaws together with the absence of wearing signs on the denticles, attributable to the handling of the prey, indicates the development of a resistant and compound rhamphotheca. To reconstruct it, we turned to the evidence provided by extant representatives with similar configurations and the osteological correlates of the beak. As a result, we propose a model for the middle-latest Eocene Antarctic Pelagornithidae, in which the rhamphotheca would have been formed by thick horny plates. The culminicorn was separated from the laternicorn by an extense sulcus nasi that continuous caudally to the apertura nasi ossea, a sturdy and hooked unguis maxillaris covering the rostrum, with small nares opening at the cranial end of the apertura nasi ossea, dorsal and ventral ramicorns, and a thick unguis mandibularis with a pseudomental fold and a sulcus on the mandible.
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页码:1745 / 1753
页数:9
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