Abstract

A survey is given of the morphological variation of the coracoscapular joint of neornithine birds. In Mesozoic stem group representatives, the coracoid exhibits a deeply concave cotyla scapularis, which articulates with a globose tuberculum coracoideum of the scapula. This morphology is likely to be functionally related to the development of a powerful supracoracoideus muscle and the formation of a triosseal canal as a pulley for the tendon of this muscle. In neornithine birds, the coracoid articulates with the scapula either via a concave cotyla or a flat facies articularis, with the latter largely restricting movements of the coracoid to the paramedian plane. Ancestral state reconstruction suggests that a cotyla scapularis is plesiomorphic for Neornithes and that a flat facies articularis scapularis evolved at least 13 times independently within the clade. For several lineages, the transition to a flat facies articularis scapularis can be traced in the fossil record, and the replacement of a cup-shaped cotyla by a flat articular facet seems to have been due to various functional demands. Often, a flat facies articularis scapularis is associated with reduced shafts of the furcula. A weakly developed furcula enables transverse movements of the coracoid and therefore enables a restriction of the mobility of the coracoscapular joint to the paramedian plane. In taxa with a large crop, a flat facies articularis scapularis is likely to be associated with a reorganization of the pectoral musculature, whereas in procellariiform birds, the transition from a cotyla to a facies articularis appears to have been correlated with the capacity for sustained soaring without wing flapping.

Highlights

  • In non-avian theropods, coracoid and scapula are either coossified into a scapulocoracoid or articulate via a straight suture (e.g., Jasinoski et al 2006; Senter 2006)

  • In taxa with a large crop, a flat facies articularis scapularis is likely to be associated with a reorganization of the pectoral musculature, whereas in procellariiform birds, the transition from a cotyla to a facies articularis appears to have been correlated with the capacity for sustained soaring without wing flapping

  • A flat facies articularis scapularis is present in the palaeognathous Tinamidae, and in the Galliformes, Suliformes, Sphenisciformes, all Procellariiformes except the Oceanitidae, Phaethontiformes, Columbiformes, Cuculiformes, Mesitornithiformes, Musophagiformes, Caprimulgidae, Podargidae, Aegothelidae, Cathartidae, Falconidae, Psittaciformes, Passeriformes, Coliiformes, Strigiformes, as well as all members of Eucavitaves

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Summary

Introduction

In non-avian theropods, coracoid and scapula are either coossified into a scapulocoracoid or articulate via a straight suture (e.g., Jasinoski et al 2006; Senter 2006). Mesozoic species of the Ornithuromorpha were predominantly terrestrial birds, which had to initiate their takeoffs from the ground, and—as indicated by the development of a large sternal keel and a functional triosseal canal—musculus supracoracoideus underwent a strong development in these birds (Mayr 2017b). Their cup-like coracoscapular joint enabled multidirectional mobility of the coracoid relative to the

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