Winged forelimbs of the small theropod dinosaur Caudipteryx could have generated small aerodynamic forces during rapid terrestrial locomotion
Yaser Saffar Talori, Yunfei Liu, Jing‐Shan Zhao, Corwin Sullivan, Jingmai K. O’Connor, Zhiheng Li
- 发表年份
- 2018
- 引用次数
- 16
- 访问权限
- 开放获取
摘要
Pennaceous feathers capable of forming aerodynamic surfaces are characteristic of Pennaraptora, the group comprising birds and their closest relatives among non-avian dinosaurs. However, members of the basal pennaraptoran lineage Oviraptorosauria were clearly flightless, and the function of pennaceous feathers on the forelimb in oviraptorosaurs is still uncertain. In the basal oviraptorosaur Caudipteryx both the skeleton and the plumage, which includes pennaceous feathers forming wing-like arrangements on the forelimbs, are well known. We used mathematical analyses, computer simulations and experiments on a robot Caudipteryx with realistic wing proportions to test whether the wings of Caudipteryx could have generated aerodynamic forces useful in rapid terrestrial locomotion. These various approaches show that, if both wings were held in a fixed and laterally extended position, they would have produced only small amounts of lift and drag. A partial simulation of flapping while running showed similarly limited aerodynamic force production. These results are consistent with the possibility that pennaceous feathers first evolved for a non-locomotor function such as display, but the effects of flapping and the possible contribution of the wings during manoeuvres such as braking and turning remain to be more fully investigated.
关键词
相关论文
Quantitative Monitoring of Gene Expression Patterns with a Complementary DNA Microarray
Mark Schena, Dari Shalon, Ronald W. Davis 等 4 位作者
1995
Design, fabrication and control of soft robots
Daniela Rus, Michael T. Tolley
2015
Trust Region Policy Optimization
John Schulman, Sergey Levine, Philipp Moritz 等 5 位作者
2015
Printing Proteins as Microarrays for High-Throughput Function Determination
Gavin MacBeath, Stuart L. Schreiber
2000