Abstract

As key components of the tetrapod pectoral girdle, the scapula and coracoid have played a significant role in the evolution of forelimb locomotion among terrestrial vertebrates. The transition from a rigid fused scapulocoracoid in ancestral non-avian theropods to a presumably more flexible separated scapula-coracoid in early birds is considered to be one of the key morphological transitions related to the rapid refinement of flight. In most Mesozoic birds (e.g., Enantiornithes and Ornithuromorpha) and crown birds the scapula and coracoid are separate (unfused), with few exceptions (e.g., flightless paleognaths). In contrast, in Confuciusornis, a basal pygostylian from the Early Cretaceous Jehol Biota known from thousands of specimens, the scapula and coracoid remain plesiomorphically fused. This raises questions regarding the influence of shoulder girdle architecture on the early evolution and refinement of avian flight. The paravian scapula-coracoid joint has never previously been investigated using histology, and thus joint morphology has only been inferred superficially. In order to better understand the evolution of this joint in Mesozoic birds, we make the first histological study of the scapulocoracoid glenoid joint in Confuciusornis. The results demonstrate that the scapula and coracoid both consist of cancellous and compact bone, with both fibrolamellar and parallel-fibered structure. A thin layer of calcified cartilage is present on the glenoid fossa surface, representing remnants of the articular surface for the humerus. Both histology and computed tomography reveal that the scapulocoracoid of Confuciusornis is fully fused, forming a synostosis. Humeral histology suggests the studied individual was nearing completion of its first year of growth, suggesting the Confuciusornis scapulocoracoid fused before skeletal maturity was achieved, as in flightless paleognaths, whereas in the plesiomorphic condition fusion occurs late in ontogeny. We hypothesize the fused scapulocoracoid of Confuciusornis is secondarily evolved and suggest the primary factor responsible for this morphology may have been a decrease in mechanical stimulation at the glenoid of Confuciusornis relative to other volant birds, linked to the unique flight style of this taxon. Further investigation into the histology of the glenoid joint in other Mesozoic paravians and extant birds will help to clarify the morphological transition of the scapula-coracoid joint in early avian evolution.

Highlights

  • Structural modifications of the scapula and coracoid during the early evolution of Aves are often described as being among the key morphological changes in the early evolution of birds (Chatterjee, 1997; Chiappe and Witmer, 2002; O’Connor et al, 2011)

  • This study represents the first traditional, non-digital osteohistological analysis of the glenoid joint in a Mesozoic theropod, the histology of this joint has been viewed through virtual thin-sections in the Daiting Archaeopteryx (Kundrát et al, 2019) and the scapular corpus has been studied through ground sections in the enantiornithine Mirusavis IVPP V18692 (Wang et al, 2019a)

  • Previous descriptions of joint morphology have not utilized microanatomical tools capable of determining the type of joint present with high accuracy. In this first osteohistological study of the scapulocoracoid glenoid joint in a Cretaceous paravian, we demonstrate that the scapulocoracoid is completely fused in Confuciusornis IVPP V11521

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Summary

Introduction

Structural modifications of the scapula and coracoid during the early evolution of Aves are often described as being among the key morphological changes in the early evolution of birds (Chatterjee, 1997; Chiappe and Witmer, 2002; O’Connor et al, 2011). In Archaeopteryx the scapula and coracoid are generally regarded as synostosed elements that form a single immobile unit called the scapulocoracoid, a morphology inherited from nonavian dinosaurs (Chiappe and Witmer, 2002) These two bones became distinct at an early stage of avian evolution, being already separate in the long boney tailed bird Jeholornis, a taxon commonly resolved in cladistic analyses as only more derived than Archaeopteryx (Figure 1; Zhou and Zhang, 2002a; O’Connor and Zhou, 2019). The scapula and coracoid to form the glenoid surface for the articulation of the humerus in all tetrapods (Benton, 2014) These elements are key components of the pectoral girdle and have played an important role during the evolution of locomotion in terrestrial vertebrates (Benton, 2014). It follows that the change early in avian evolution from fusion between the scapula and coracoid to complete separation of these elements most likely represents a flight adaptation, presumably facilitating greater mobility and more advanced forms of powered flight

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