Abstract

We describe three-dimensionally preserved feathers in mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber that share macro-morphological similarities (e.g., proportionally wide rachis with a “medial stripe”) with lithic, two-dimensionally preserved rachis-dominated feathers, first recognized in the Jehol Biota. These feathers in amber reveal a unique ventrally concave and dorsoventrally thin rachis, and a dorsal groove (sometimes pigmented) that we identify as the “medial stripe” visible in many rachis-dominated rectrices of Mesozoic birds. The distally pennaceous portion of these feathers shows differentiated proximal and distal barbules, the latter with hooklets forming interlocking barbs. Micro-CT scans and transverse sections demonstrate the absence of histodifferentiated cortex and medullary pith of the rachis and barb rami. The highly differentiated barbules combined with the lack of obvious histodifferentiation of the barb rami or rachis suggests that these feathers could have been formed without the full suite and developmental interplay of intermediate filament alpha keratins and corneous beta-proteins that is employed in the cornification process of modern feathers. This study thus highlights how the development of these feathers might have differed from that of their modern counterparts, namely in the morphogenesis of the ventral components of the rachis and barb rami. We suggest that the concave ventral surface of the rachis of these Cretaceous feathers is not homologous with the ventral groove of modern rachises. Our study of these Burmese feathers also confirms previous claims, based on two-dimensional fossils, that they correspond to an extinct morphotype and it cautions about the common practice of extrapolating developmental aspects (and mechanical attributes) of modern feathers to those of stem birds (and their dinosaurian outgroups) because the latter need not to have developed through identical pathways.

Highlights

  • We describe three-dimensionally preserved feathers in mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber that share macro-morphological similarities with lithic, two-dimensionally preserved rachis-dominated feathers, first recognized in the Jehol Biota

  • The new fossils significantly expand our knowledge of the morphology of rachis dominated feather (RDF)

  • These fossils show that the rachis of these feathers was (1) dorsoventrally extremely thin, (2) ventrally concave, and (3) scarred by a dorsal groove and a ventral ridge

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Summary

Introduction

We describe three-dimensionally preserved feathers in mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber that share macro-morphological similarities (e.g., proportionally wide rachis with a “medial stripe”) with lithic, two-dimensionally preserved rachis-dominated feathers, first recognized in the Jehol Biota. A clear definition for the morphology of RDFs has yet to be fully proposed, largely due to disagreement in how to interpret the features exhibited These feathers have an elongate “racket-plume” appearance consisting of a long proximal portion formed by a proportionally wide rachis, a distally vaned section, and a dark “medial stripe” that runs the full length of the feather (Fig. 1). Many of these feathers are exquisitely preserved with some structurally resistant components (i.e., melanosomes) observable at the microscale[10], the preservation of these two-dimensional lithic fossils prevents an accurate three-dimensional microstructural whole-feather assessment. We present a set of new amber specimens to identify previously unknown features of RDFs and highlight differences in the development of these feathers when compared to their modern counterparts

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