Artículo de publicación ISISpecialized morphologies of bird feet have evolved several times independently as different groups have become zygodactyl, semi-zygodactyl, heterodactyl, pamprodactyl or syndactyl. Birds have also convergently evolved similar modes of development, in a spectrum that goes from precocial to altricial. Using the new context provided by recent molecular phylogenies, we compared the evolution of foot morphology and modes of development among extant avian families. Variations in the arrangement of toes with respect to the anisodactyl ancestral condition have occurred only in altricial groups. Those groups represent four independent events of super-altriciality and many independent transformations of toe arra...
Understanding the genetic basis of similar phenotypes shared between lineages is a long-lasting rese...
Artículo de publicación ISIBackground: The homology of the digits in the bird wing is a high-profile...
Embryonic muscular activity (EMA) is involved in the development of several distinctive traits of bi...
Artículo de publicación ISISpecialized morphologies of bird feet have evolved several times indepen...
The zygodactyl orientation of toes (digits II and III pointing forwards, digits I and IV pointing ba...
Accipitriformes, Strigiformes, and Falconiformes are the three extant raptorial avian clades, most m...
The tarsometatarsus conformation and foot types in birds are unique traits within vertebrates. We in...
In early theropod dinosaurs—the ancestors of birds—the hallux (digit 1) had an elevated position wit...
The evolutionary diversification of birds has been facilitated by specializations for various locomo...
In order to fully understand the processes that influence phenotypic evolution, it is necessary to e...
Understanding the origins of organismal diversity is one of biology\u27s most enduring quests. Many ...
© 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. In early theropod dinosaurs—the ancestors of birds—the hallux (digit ...
Supplementary materials for Brigit Tronrud's DPhil thesis (University of Oxford, Department of Earth...
<p>The aim of this work is to estimate the relationship between developmental mode and flight style,...
Artículo de publicación ISIMost birds have an opposable digit 1 (hallux) allowing the foot to grasp,...
Understanding the genetic basis of similar phenotypes shared between lineages is a long-lasting rese...
Artículo de publicación ISIBackground: The homology of the digits in the bird wing is a high-profile...
Embryonic muscular activity (EMA) is involved in the development of several distinctive traits of bi...
Artículo de publicación ISISpecialized morphologies of bird feet have evolved several times indepen...
The zygodactyl orientation of toes (digits II and III pointing forwards, digits I and IV pointing ba...
Accipitriformes, Strigiformes, and Falconiformes are the three extant raptorial avian clades, most m...
The tarsometatarsus conformation and foot types in birds are unique traits within vertebrates. We in...
In early theropod dinosaurs—the ancestors of birds—the hallux (digit 1) had an elevated position wit...
The evolutionary diversification of birds has been facilitated by specializations for various locomo...
In order to fully understand the processes that influence phenotypic evolution, it is necessary to e...
Understanding the origins of organismal diversity is one of biology\u27s most enduring quests. Many ...
© 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. In early theropod dinosaurs—the ancestors of birds—the hallux (digit ...
Supplementary materials for Brigit Tronrud's DPhil thesis (University of Oxford, Department of Earth...
<p>The aim of this work is to estimate the relationship between developmental mode and flight style,...
Artículo de publicación ISIMost birds have an opposable digit 1 (hallux) allowing the foot to grasp,...
Understanding the genetic basis of similar phenotypes shared between lineages is a long-lasting rese...
Artículo de publicación ISIBackground: The homology of the digits in the bird wing is a high-profile...
Embryonic muscular activity (EMA) is involved in the development of several distinctive traits of bi...