These Extinct Birds Really Stretch the Definition of “Bird” - YouTube

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{♫Intro♫}
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This episode is brought to you by the Music for Scientists album, now available on all
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streaming services.
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So you think you know what a bird is.
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Beaks, feathers, wings, screams for peanuts way too early in the morning.
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But birds have been around for a good 150 million years, and in that time, they’ve
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come in all sorts of forms, not all of which are familiar to us today.
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Because when evolution gets the chance to riff on the basic bird plan… it takes it.
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So here are some extinct examples whose strange features might make you rethink what you know
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about evolution -- and maybe how you define birds altogether.
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Let’s start at the beginning, with the most famous weird bird of all time: Archaeopteryx.
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Archaeopteryx was discovered in the 1860s in 150-million-year-old rocks from the Late
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Jurassic Period.
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It’s been nicknamed the “first bird,” since it’s among the earliest known fossil
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animals with obvious bird features.
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It’s got wings, feathers, and an overall bird-shaped body.
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But this wasn’t a bird-like we know them today.
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For one, it had a toothy snout instead of a beak.
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It also had a small breastbone that didn’t support large flight muscles.
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And it had grasping hands in its wings and a long bony tail.
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Now that’s a weird bird.
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But it wasn’t the only one.
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It shared these features with plenty of Late Jurassic cousins, like Xiaotingia and Anchiornis.
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These animals are so strange that there’s debate among paleontologists over whether
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they’re really birds at all.
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Here’s the deal: all birds alive today evolved from ancestors that lived much later, during
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the Cretaceous Period.
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This group is often called Neornithes, or crown group birds, because they make up the
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crown of birds’ evolutionary tree.
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Think of them as “birds as we know them.”
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But the earliest birds-as-we-know-them lived in a world that was already full of birds,
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including lots of offshoots from the trunk of that tree, below the crown.
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Those ones are all extinct now.
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This whole collection of modern birds, their ancestors, and their extinct cousins are often
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called Avialae -- sort of the expanded universe of birds.
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See, birds aren’t just defined by their features, but also by their ancestry.
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Birds include all species, living and extinct, who share more recent ancestors with modern
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birds than with non-bird dinosaurs.
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So Archaeopteryx’s toothy grin, long tail, and weak flight muscles don’t disqualify
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it from being a bird as long as it falls on the bird side of that ancestral divide.
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But when we look so far back in the story of bird evolution, it gets tricky to tell
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which of those feathery critters are early birds and which fall just outside the bird
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lineage.
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The very earliest birds were so, well, dinosaur-y that even if you saw them in person, they
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would have been hard to tell apart from their closest dinosaur cousins -- like the famous
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Velociraptor or the four-winged Microraptor.
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And that’s just the beginning.
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Birds didn’t just start weird in the days of Archaeopteryx and then quickly become familiar
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-- they stayed weird for a while, even as they took over the skies.
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Take for instance Jeholornis, a bird from the Early Cretaceous of northern China, over
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120 million years ago.
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These were definitely flyers; the anatomy of their chest and shoulders is very similar
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to modern birds.
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But they also held onto lots of early features, including teeth in their jaws and a long bony
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tail.
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In fact, their tail was even longer than the tail of Archaeopteryx.
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Birds as we know them don’t have bony tails.
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Instead, they have a small series of fused tailbones called a pygostyle, which supports
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a fan of feathers that help in flight.
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You might think a long tail would get in the way while flying, but some paleontologists
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have suggested the tail of Jeholornis might have acted as a stabilizer in the air.
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Another strange feature of these birds was their growth rate.
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Modern birds grow super-fast, but studies of Jeholornis bone tissue show much slower
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growth, more like reptiles.
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So while birds as we know them typically spend very little time as juveniles, Jeholornis
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was younger for longer, and might even have taken a longer time to start flying.
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These weird flyers represent early branches in bird evolution.
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The suite of modern features we see today didn’t pop up all at once -- instead, evolution
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came up with a bunch of combinations of ancient and newer characteristics over millions of
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years.
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Around that same time, there was a much more familiar-looking bird named Protopteryx.
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It had long wings, grasping feet for perching on branches, and a complex breastbone to support
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flight muscles.
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And it was a trendsetter: Protopteryx is one of the earliest members of a group called
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Enantiornithes.
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These so-called “opposite birds” were the most diverse group of Cretaceous birds.
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From a distance, you’d have a hard time telling an opposite bird from a modern one,
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but a closer look would reveal the oddities.
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Like many early birds, most of these had clawed hands and toothy snouts, although some evolved
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beaks independently of birds-as-we-know-them.
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That actually seems to happen a lot.
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Also, their shoulder and wing bones were structured differently from modern birds.
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Which seems to be where the “opposite birds” moniker comes from -- their wing anatomy is
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downright backwards.
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But despite their weird wings, studies have found that these birds were not only capable
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of flight -- they exhibited a wide variety of flight styles, just like birds today.
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Another strange feature of Enantiornithes is their intrepid babies.
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Baby birds today tend to be helpless little things that can’t do much on their own,
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much like human babies.
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But some birds are independent at a very young age.
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Fossil remains of hatchling opposite birds show advanced development in their skeletons,
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including their wings, which suggests they were built to face the world and even fly
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shortly after hatching.
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That’s not totally unheard of in birds today.
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But it might have been the norm for Enantiornithes.
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Just another way opposite birds were, well, opposite.
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But as strange as they were, they were also pretty common birds in the Cretaceous.
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They may be opposite birds to us, but at the time, they were just… birds.
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But ancient birds weren’t just strange in the sky; they were also weird in the water.
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Like the Late Cretaceous bird Hesperornis, as recently as 70 million years ago.
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Hesperornis was a big deal when it was first discovered in the 1870s.
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It was one of the first birds known to have teeth -- but that’s far from its most unusual
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feature.
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Hesperornis is clearly built for the water.
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It has a streamlined body with powerful back legs for foot-propelled swimming, similar
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to modern-day diving birds like ducks and cormorants.
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Nowadays, we know there was a whole group of these birds: the Hesperornithiformes.
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But while many modern diving birds can still fly, most Hesperornithiformes definitely couldn’t.
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Many species had shrunken front arms that couldn’t hope to get the birds airborne.
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Some species of Hesperornis did away with their arms entirely.
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With huge, splaying back legs and no arms, Hesperornis would be pretty useless on land.
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They might have had to push themselves along the ground like seals, or just avoid land
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altogether.
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These are another peculiar branch early in bird evolution, but one that wasn’t totally
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bananas -- many water-loving birds today follow in the bizarre footsteps of these strange
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swimmers.
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I’m kind of glad ducks still have wings, though.
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Around 66 million years ago, the Mesozoic Era ended with a mass extinction that brought
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an end to most dinosaurs, including all the groups of ancient birds we’ve been talking
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about.
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The only dinosaurs that made it through to our present Cenozoic Era were early members
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of crown group birds -- birds as we know them.
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Those survivors were equipped with familiar bird features like toothless beaks and pygostyles,
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and they passed those traits onto their descendants, which are all the birds that have existed
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since.
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But they didn’t stop getting weird.
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For example, in Europe during the Paleocene Epoch, over 56 million years ago, the largest
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animals on land were birds called Gastornis.
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These birds stood up to two meters tall and weighed over 150 kilograms.
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As you might imagine, they didn’t fly, but walked on strong back legs like an ostrich.
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Gastornis has such an unusual skull that for a long time, paleontologists weren’t sure
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what they ate.
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Some thought they might even have been giant apex predators.
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But more recent evidence, including detailed study of the structure of their jaws, suggests
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they were huge herbivores, filling a similar role to modern-day mammals like deer and wildebeest.
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A bird that can’t fly may seem unusual, but it’s not limited to ostriches and penguins.
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Flightlessness is estimated to have evolved in birds more than 150 times.
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From South America’s terror birds to Madagascar’s elephant birds, it’s actually kind of a
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thing.
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It seems odd now, but flightless mega-birds have been a winning strategy for tens of millions
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of years.
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The last entry on our list are the pelagornithidae, the “bony-toothed birds.”
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That’s right -- teeth are back!
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Well, sort of.
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Like I said earlier, birds as we know them don’t have teeth.
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So what do you do when evolution has taken away your ability to develop teeth, but you
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really need teeth to catch your food?
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Well, pelagornithids grew bony spikes right out of their beaks.
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They didn’t have true dental tissue, but the spikes were probably still useful for
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grabbing food like fish and squid.
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And this wasn’t an isolated group.
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They lived all over the world from the Paleocene to the Pliocene, a legacy of over 50 million
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years!
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Strangely enough, there are still birds with false teeth today.
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Some waterfowl, like geese, have similar, but smaller, spikes in their beaks.
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But the bony-toothed birds didn’t just have huge fake teeth.
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They had huge bodies!
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The largest species are estimated to have been 20 to 40 kilograms, with wingspans over
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six meters across, making them some of the biggest flying birds of all time.
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For comparison, among today’s flying birds, albatrosses are the largest with wingspans
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of 3.5 meters, and Great Bustards are the heaviest at 19 kilograms.
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Now, that’s impressive, but it does kind of leave us wondering why they didn’t get
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even bigger.
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After all, the largest pterosaurs had ten-meter wingspans and weighed 250 kilograms, so there
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must be a reason birds can’t match them.
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And it might be… because they were birds.
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See, as birds evolved, they inherited their dinosaur ancestors’ beefy back legs, useful
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for running, grabbing, and of course, for kicking off the ground to take flight.
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But a heavier bird needs bigger leg muscles to get off the ground, and bigger leg muscles
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are heavy, which means the bird needs stronger wings, so it needs even bigger legs to get
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off the ground, and, well, you get the idea.
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Those legs help birds get into the air, but they also weigh them down.
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Big pterosaurs, on the other hand, are thought to have used their wings to take off -- sort
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of a jumping push-up -- so they’re using their wing muscles for take-off and for flight.
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So, birds’ legs, which have been so important over 150 million years of running, perching,
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swimming, and grabbing prey, might also limit how big they can get while still flying.
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And that might be one of the weirdest things we’ve learned about birds: what makes a
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bird isn’t just what they have, but also their limitations.
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All birds started off with the same set of features, and since then they’ve had to
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work with the hand -- or wing -- they were dealt.
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But evolution has gone wild pushing that bird body to the limits, producing strange, unexpected,
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and sometimes surprisingly successful forms.
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The evolutionary story of birds is one of untold diversity, and it includes a lot more
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than what first comes to mind when you think of birds.
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If you enjoy not just the beauty of what evolution comes up with, but also the elegant work it
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takes to discover it all, you might like Music for Scientists.
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Music for Scientists is an album of appreciation for everyone who spends their time doing science
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-- and communicating about it, too.
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And it was inspired by all that beauty and elegance in the world around us, from the
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If you think you’d enjoy Music for Scientists, you can find it at the link in the description.
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