Dinosaurs' Living Descendants
China's spectacular feathered fossils have finally answered the century-old question about the ancestors of today's birds
- By Richard Stone
- Photographs by Stefen Chow
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2010, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
Deciphering how feathers morphed over the ages from spindly fibers to delicate instruments of flight would shed light on the transition of dinosaurs to birds, and how natural selection forged this complex trait. Few scientists know ancient feathers more intimately than IVPP's Xu Xing. He has discovered 40 dinosaur species—more than any other living scientist—from all over China. His office at IVPP, across the street from the Beijing Zoo, is cluttered with fossils and casts.
Xu envisions feather evolution as an incremental process. Feathers in their most primitive form were single filaments, resembling quills, that jutted from reptilian skin. These simple structures go way back; even pterodactyls had filaments of sorts. Xu suggests that feather evolution may have gotten started in a common ancestor of pterodactyls and dinosaurs—nearly 240 million years ago, or some 95 million years before Archaeopteryx.
After the emergence of single filaments came multiple filaments joined at the base. Next to appear in the fossil record were paired barbs shooting off a central shaft. Eventually, dense rows of interlocking barbs formed a flat surface: the basic blueprint of the so-called pennaceous feathers of modern birds. All these feather types have been found in fossil impressions of theropods, the dinosaur suborder that includes Tyrannosaurus rex as well as birds and other Maniraptorans.
Filaments are found elsewhere in the dinosaur family tree as well, in species far removed from theropods, such as Psittacosaurus, a parrot-faced herbivore that arose around 130 million years ago. It had sparse single filaments along its tail. It's not clear why filaments appear in some dinosaur lineages but not in others. "One possibility is that feather-like structures evolved very early in dinosaur history," says Xu, and some groups maintained the structures, while other groups lost them. "But finally in Maniraptorans, feathers stabilized and evolved into modern feathers," he says. Or filaments may have evolved independently at different times. As Sues points out, "It seems that, genetically, it's not a great trick to make a scale into a filament."
Originally, single filaments may well have been for display, the dinosaur equivalent of a peacock's iridescent plumage. Vivid evidence for that theory appeared when scientists unveiled the true colors of 125-million-year-old feathers. Bird feathers and reptile scales contain melanosomes—tiny sacs holding varieties of the pigment melanin. Many paleontologists suspected that dinosaur feathers also contained melanosomes. In Mike Benton's laboratory at the University of Bristol, IVPP's Zhang Fucheng spent more than a year searching for melanosomes in photographs of bird and dinosaur fossils taken with an electron microscope. Zhang's diligence paid off in 2009 when he pinpointed melanosomes in Confuciusornis that contained eumelanin, which gives feathers a gray or black tinge, and pheomelanin, which gives them a chestnut to reddish-brown color. The animal's feathers had patches of white, black and orange-brown coloring.
Sinosauropteryx was even more stunning. Zhang found that the filaments running down its back and tail must have made the dinosaur look like an orange-and-white-striped barber pole. Such a vibrant pattern suggests that "feathers first arose as agents for color display," Benton says.
Early feathers could have served other purposes. Hollow filaments may have dissipated heat, much as the frills of some modern lizards do today. Other paleontologists speculate feathers first evolved to retain heat. A telling example comes from fossils of Oviraptor—a theropod unearthed in Mongolia that lived around 75 million years ago—squatting over egg-filled nests. Oviraptors tucked their legs into the center of the clutch and hugged the periphery with their long forelimbs—a posture bearing an uncanny resemblance to brooding birds keeping their eggs warm. Dinosaurs related to Oviraptor were covered with pennaceous feathers, suggesting that Oviraptor was as well. "Sitting on a nest like that only made sense if it had feathers" to gently insulate its young, says Sues.
Feathers did, of course, eventually become an instrument of flight. Some paleontologists envision a scenario in which dinosaurs used feathers to help them occupy trees for the first time. "Because dinosaurs had hinged ankles, they could not rotate their feet and they couldn't climb well. Maybe feathers helped them scramble up tree trunks," Carrano says. Baby birds of primarily ground-dwelling species like turkeys use their wings in this way. Feathers may have become increasingly aerodynamic over millions of years, eventually allowing dinosaurs to glide from tree to tree. Individuals able to perform such a feat might have been able to reach new food sources or better escape predators—and pass the trait on to subsequent generations.
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Related topics: Birds Dinosaurs Fossils China
Additional Sources
"Four-Winged Fossil Bridges Bird-Dinosaur Gap," by Sid Perkins, Science News, in Wired, September 25, 2009.
"Dinosaur Fossil Reveals True Feather Colors" by Sid Perkins, Science News, in Wired, February 4, 2010









Comments (9)
is it a four legged bird?cool i've never seen anything like that, or a cat with feathers, or anything other than the basic stuff you find on the internet.but' i thought man was biblical, being the greatest sreation and predator in history. makes you wonder what something that much older was realyy like.really
Posted by steven on July 3,2011 | 12:08 AM
Very informative. I liked this article very much.
Posted by Prasun Bhattacharyya on February 16,2011 | 01:16 AM
DINOSAURS LIVING DESCENDANTS Dec 2010
I get annoyed at paleoscience' constant efforts to take land "lizards" (dinos, amphibios, reptos, etc.) up into the trees without realistic visual forethought. Its a great leap for a ground pounder to perch. So, what makes more sense in between.....lizards could run but not yet fly (various degrees of flapping, guidance, etc.)!
Lizards had almost zero reasons to climb or perch in trees! Fruit/flowers/honey....not! Eat birds eggs...not even around yet! Escape predators....maybe? Which predator outlasted the other--tree v. ground?
Water draws plants and animals! It makes most sense for lizards to hang around water...hence most, if not all, pre-perch lizards remains are found at, in, near water sediments. Hence, ca-zillions of near water cliff dwelling/breeding birds still exist today. Where are the modern perch features on penguins, ducks, sea gulls, etc.?
Lizards learned to leap, jump, run off cliffs near water 1st...to escape danger; find &/or pounce on prey in/by water; scoop fish, protect offlings in cliffs, etc! Pre-fly lizards began to glide first--perching is a modern physical capability as pointed out in the article. Pre-fly lizards had strong run/leap/climb cliff capability/features coupled with weak (compared with today) fly feathers/stems for gliding/steerage....they didn't need to cavort and fly from tree to tree yet!
SO, LET'S NOT DO THE GROUND TO TREE LEAPING LIZARDS SPIN TOO SOON!
George Stevenson
Portland, Oregon
Posted by George Stevenson on December 9,2010 | 02:00 AM
What a great article!
Posted by Tom on December 1,2010 | 03:43 PM
Was the comment about Taiwan being on the map really necessary? You just had to voice your political opinions while talking about these amazing feathered dinosaurs from millions of years ago?
Posted by Adou on November 28,2010 | 10:34 PM
The illustration of the archaepteryx clearly has the leg joints wrong compared to the fossil image.
Posted by walt laramie on November 27,2010 | 07:47 PM
Some classic imitations or pritendings that they are strange. Can Irian-Papua island be one biggest dinosaur; can Turkey Salt and Eğridir lakes be biggest birds at history before deluvions? Some mauntains were full of buffalos due to some ignorante abrodal villagers. Can the biggest elephants or swans be bigger two times more and can they live two times more? Best sea can be similer to fish shape relatively that kind of hyphothese. The creatures were at craters. The origen of shape of the animals were the pharalel star groups relatively to same hyphothese. The important is being rational, realist and thruer guesses, imaginations. Valor Alexander
Posted by Valor Alexander on November 21,2010 | 09:31 PM
Extraordinaire...
Posted by Lucien Alexandre Marion on November 20,2010 | 09:22 PM
The article is very well written and covers much information that wasn't known when I was a zoology student. Thanks for making it available online.
Posted by Raymond Holderman on November 19,2010 | 10:51 AM