FYI: Did Prehistoric Birds Evolve Flight By Falling Out of Trees?

Tuesday, July 24, 2012 - 14:30 in Paleontology & Archaeology

Prehistoric Bird Jane Burton/Warren Photographic/Getty Images Possibly. The trees-down (or "arboreal") hypothesis has been around for many years, says evolutionary biologist Richard O. Prum of Yale University. Researchers guessed that the scales of tree-dwelling Triassic reptiles elongated into feathers, which helped them leap away from predators. Once the proto-birds could glide, they were en route to avian flight. "It was like one big, crazy hairball of ideas all stuck together," Prum says. What's wrong with the story? Scientists have largely worked out the origin of birds and feathers, two thirds of what Prum calls the "holy trinity" of evolutionary ornithology. In the 1970s, Yale professor John Ostrom developed anatomical evidence strongly suggesting that birds evolved from theropods such as Tyrannosaurus rex. Other research showed that feathers weren't always for flying. Prum's own research showed how reptilian scales might have evolved into elaborate, multicolored structures for social display, not for flight. So...

Read the whole article on PopSci

More from PopSci

Learn more about

Latest Science Newsletter

Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox! It's free!

Check out our next project, Biology.Net