The evolution of the avian wing has long fascinated biologists, yet almost no work includes the length of primary feathers in consideration of overall wing length variation. Here we show that the length of the longest primary feather (f(prim)) contributing to overall wing length scales with negative allometry against total arm (ta = humerus+ulna+manus). The scaling exponent varied slightly, although not significantly so, depending on whether a species level analysis was used or phylogeny was controlled for using independent contrasts: f(prim) is proportional to ta(0.78-0.82). The scaling exponent was not significantly different from that predicted (0.86) by earlier work. It appears that there is a general trend for the primary feathers of b...
<p>The aim of this work is to estimate the relationship between developmental mode and flight style,...
The evolution of wing morphology among birds and its functional consequences remains an open questio...
Bird tails are extraordinarily variable in length and functionality. In some species, males have evo...
The evolution of the avian wing has long fascinated biologists, yet almost no work includes the leng...
The primary feathers of birds are subject to cyclical forces in flight causing their shafts (rachise...
Aves are an incredibly diverse class of animals, ranging greatly in size and thriving in a wide vari...
Aves are an incredibly diverse class of animals, ranging greatly in size and thriving in a wide vari...
We investigated the relationship between wing element proportions and flight mode in a dataset of li...
The selection pressures that drive flight feather morphology are poorly understood. Using a phylogen...
Despite a diversity of about 10 000 extant species, the sophisticated avian ‘body plan’ has not much...
Background: Among living fliers (birds, bats, and insects), birds display relatively high aspect rat...
Although many Mesozoic fossil birds have been found with primary feathers preserved, these structure...
Variation in rachis (central shaft) morphology in individual remiges (flight feathers) within and am...
1. The functional significance of intra- and interspecific structural variations in the flight feath...
We investigated the relationship between wing element proportions and flight mode in a dataset of li...
<p>The aim of this work is to estimate the relationship between developmental mode and flight style,...
The evolution of wing morphology among birds and its functional consequences remains an open questio...
Bird tails are extraordinarily variable in length and functionality. In some species, males have evo...
The evolution of the avian wing has long fascinated biologists, yet almost no work includes the leng...
The primary feathers of birds are subject to cyclical forces in flight causing their shafts (rachise...
Aves are an incredibly diverse class of animals, ranging greatly in size and thriving in a wide vari...
Aves are an incredibly diverse class of animals, ranging greatly in size and thriving in a wide vari...
We investigated the relationship between wing element proportions and flight mode in a dataset of li...
The selection pressures that drive flight feather morphology are poorly understood. Using a phylogen...
Despite a diversity of about 10 000 extant species, the sophisticated avian ‘body plan’ has not much...
Background: Among living fliers (birds, bats, and insects), birds display relatively high aspect rat...
Although many Mesozoic fossil birds have been found with primary feathers preserved, these structure...
Variation in rachis (central shaft) morphology in individual remiges (flight feathers) within and am...
1. The functional significance of intra- and interspecific structural variations in the flight feath...
We investigated the relationship between wing element proportions and flight mode in a dataset of li...
<p>The aim of this work is to estimate the relationship between developmental mode and flight style,...
The evolution of wing morphology among birds and its functional consequences remains an open questio...
Bird tails are extraordinarily variable in length and functionality. In some species, males have evo...