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FORELIMB POSTURE IN DINOSAURS AND THE EVOLUTION OF THE AVIAN FLAPPING FLIGHT-STROKE
Authors:Robert L. Nudds   Gareth J. Dyke
Affiliation:Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Manchester, Jacksons Mill, PO Box 88, Sackville St., Manchester, M60 1QD, United Kingdom;E-mail:;School of Biology and Environmental Science, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4 Ireland
Abstract:
Ontogenetic and behavioral studies using birds currently do not document the early evolution of flight because birds (including juveniles) used in such studies employ forelimb oscillation frequencies over 10 Hz, forelimb stroke-angles in excess of 130°, and possess uniquely avian flight musculatures. Living birds are an advanced morphological stage in the development of flapping flight. To gain insight into the early stages of flight evolution (i.e., prebird), in the absence of a living analogue, a new approach using Strouhal number     was used. Strouhal number is a nondimensional number that describes the relationship between wing-stroke amplitude ( A ), wing-beat frequency ( f ), and flight speed ( U ). Calculations indicated that even moderate wing movements are enough to generate rudimentary thrust and that a propulsive flapping flight-stroke could have evolved via gradual incremental changes in wing movement and wing morphology. More fundamental to the origin of the avian flapping flight-stroke is the question of how a symmetrical forelimb posture—required for gliding and flapping flight—evolved from an alternating forelimb motion, evident in all extant bipeds when running except birds.
Keywords:Bird    locomotion    morphology    Strouhal number    wing
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