Early Cretaceous Bird Yanornis was a Fish Eater
New Specimens of Yanornis Indicate a Piscivorous Diet and Modern Alimentary Canal
Authors:
Zheng et al
Abstract:
A
crop adapted for an herbivorous diet of seeds has previously been
documented in the Early Cretaceous birds Sapeornis and Hongshanornis.
Here we report on several specimens of Yanornis that preserve a crop
containing fish. One specimen preserves two whole fish in the
oesophagus, indicating that Early Cretaceous birds shared trophic
specializations with Neornithes for the increased energetic demands of
flight – namely the storing of food for later consumption when the
stomach is full. Whole fish also indicate that despite their presence,
teeth were not used to orally process food, suggesting the hypertrophied
dentition in this taxon were utilized in prey capture. The presence of
macerated fish bones in the crop of other specimens indicates the highly
efficient advanced muscular system of peristalsis responsible for
moving ingested items between different segments of the alimentary canal
was also in place. Despite the fact many features of the modern avian
alimentary canal are inferred to compensate for the absence of teeth in
birds (expandable oesophagus, grinding gizzard), the derived alimentary
canal was apparently present in toothed Cretaceous birds. Although
Yanornis was considered to have switched their diet from piscivorous to
herbivorous, based on position and morphology we reinterpret the
gastroliths reported in one specimen as sand impacted in the intestines,
and reconstruct the taxon as primarily piscivorous. This is a novel
interpretation for fossilized gastroliths, and the first documentation
of this condition in the fossil record.
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