中国科学院机构知识库网格
Chinese Academy of Sciences Institutional Repositories Grid
A Feathered Dinosaur Tail with Primitive Plumage Trapped in Mid-Cretaceous Amber

文献类型:期刊论文

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作者Xing, LD; McKellar, RC; Xu, X; Li, G; Bai, M; Persons, WS; Miyashita, T; Benton, MJ; Zhang, JP; Wolfe, AP
刊名CURRENT BIOLOGY ; CURRENT BIOLOGY
出版日期2016 ; 2016
卷号26期号:24页码:3352-3360
ISSN号0960-9822
DOI10.1016/j.cub.2016.10.008 ; 10.1016/j.cub.2016.10.008
文献子类Article
英文摘要In the two decades since the discovery of feathered dinosaurs [1-3], the range of plumage known from non-avialan theropods has expanded significantly, confirming several features predicted by developmentally informed models of feather evolution [4-10]. However, three-dimensional feather morphology and evolutionary patterns remain difficult to interpret, due to compression in sedimentary rocks [9, 11]. Recent discoveries in Cretaceous amber from Canada, France, Japan, Lebanon, Myanmar, and the United States [12-18] reveal much finer levels of structural detail, but taxonomic placement is uncertain because plumage is rarely associated with identifiable skeletal material [14]. Here we describe the feathered tail of a non-avialan theropod preserved in mid-Cretaceous (similar to 99 Ma) amber from Kachin State, Myanmar [17], with plumage structure that directly informs the evolutionary developmental pathway of feathers. This specimen provides an opportunity to document pristine feathers in direct association with a putative juvenile coelurosaur, preserving fine morphological details, including the spatial arrangement of follicles and feathers on the body, and micrometer-scale features of the plumage. Many feathers exhibit a short, slender rachis with alternating barbs and a uniform series of contiguous barbules, supporting the developmental hypothesis that barbs already possessed barbules when they fused to form the rachis [19]. Beneath the feathers, carbonized soft tissues offer a glimpse of preservational potential and history for the inclusion; abundant Fe2+ suggests that vestiges of primary hemoglobin and ferritin remain trapped within the tail. The new finding highlights the unique preservation potential of amber for understanding the morphology and evolution of coelurosaurian integumentary structures.; In the two decades since the discovery of feathered dinosaurs [1-3], the range of plumage known from non-avialan theropods has expanded significantly, confirming several features predicted by developmentally informed models of feather evolution [4-10]. However, three-dimensional feather morphology and evolutionary patterns remain difficult to interpret, due to compression in sedimentary rocks [9, 11]. Recent discoveries in Cretaceous amber from Canada, France, Japan, Lebanon, Myanmar, and the United States [12-18] reveal much finer levels of structural detail, but taxonomic placement is uncertain because plumage is rarely associated with identifiable skeletal material [14]. Here we describe the feathered tail of a non-avialan theropod preserved in mid-Cretaceous (similar to 99 Ma) amber from Kachin State, Myanmar [17], with plumage structure that directly informs the evolutionary developmental pathway of feathers. This specimen provides an opportunity to document pristine feathers in direct association with a putative juvenile coelurosaur, preserving fine morphological details, including the spatial arrangement of follicles and feathers on the body, and micrometer-scale features of the plumage. Many feathers exhibit a short, slender rachis with alternating barbs and a uniform series of contiguous barbules, supporting the developmental hypothesis that barbs already possessed barbules when they fused to form the rachis [19]. Beneath the feathers, carbonized soft tissues offer a glimpse of preservational potential and history for the inclusion; abundant Fe2+ suggests that vestiges of primary hemoglobin and ferritin remain trapped within the tail. The new finding highlights the unique preservation potential of amber for understanding the morphology and evolution of coelurosaurian integumentary structures.
电子版国际标准刊号1879-0445
WOS关键词BARB RIDGES ; EVOLUTION ; CHINA ; ORIGIN ; FOSSILS
语种英语 ; 英语
WOS记录号WOS:000390666200029 ; WOS:000390666200029
源URL[http://ir.ihep.ac.cn/handle/311005/260410]  
专题中国科学院高能物理研究所
作者单位中国科学院高能物理研究所
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Xing, LD,McKellar, RC,Xu, X,et al. A Feathered Dinosaur Tail with Primitive Plumage Trapped in Mid-Cretaceous Amber, A Feathered Dinosaur Tail with Primitive Plumage Trapped in Mid-Cretaceous Amber[J]. CURRENT BIOLOGY, CURRENT BIOLOGY,2016, 2016,26, 26(24):3352-3360, 3352-3360.
APA Xing, LD.,McKellar, RC.,Xu, X.,Li, G.,Bai, M.,...&易栖如.(2016).A Feathered Dinosaur Tail with Primitive Plumage Trapped in Mid-Cretaceous Amber.CURRENT BIOLOGY,26(24),3352-3360.
MLA Xing, LD,et al."A Feathered Dinosaur Tail with Primitive Plumage Trapped in Mid-Cretaceous Amber".CURRENT BIOLOGY 26.24(2016):3352-3360.

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来源:高能物理研究所

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