88 results on '"beak shape"'
Search Results
2. Using naturally-occurring variation in beak morphology to reduce feather pecking damage in laying hens
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Struthers, Sarah, Sandilands, Vicky, and Schoenebeck, Jeffrey
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beak morphology ,feather pecking damage ,laying hens ,feather pecking ,poultry industry ,genetic selection ,foraging behaviour ,feather cover ,liveability ,beak shape ,severe feather pecking ,premaxillary bones ,dentary bones ,geometric morphometrics (GMM) - Abstract
Outbreaks of severe feather pecking continue to be a serious welfare and economic concern for the poultry industry, particularly within the egg sector. Increasing consumer awareness of how poultry is raised and managed has led to a shift from cage systems to loose-housed 'alternative' systems, increasing the risk of outbreaks. Severe feather pecking, a form of injurious pecking, is commonly observed in laying hen flocks and can lead to cannibalism and high mortality. As a result, research has increasingly focused on how best to prevent and control severe feather pecking without needing beak treatment (an effective method of reducing physical damage caused by severe feather pecking and is commonly performed at day-old using infrared energy). Alternative practices to beak treatment include genetic selection against the behaviour itself, using enrichment materials to encourage appropriate foraging behaviour, and genetic selection of traits related to the behaviour (i.e., feather cover, liveability, and beak shape). This project examined the possibility of using genetic selection of beak shape to reduce damage inflicted by severe feather pecking. Significant beak shape variation exists within and between breeding laying hen lines, and research has shown that aspects of beak shape are heritable. This suggests incorporating beak shape data into selection indices is possible; however, characterisation of beak phenotypes and the amount of physical damage different beak shapes can cause is first needed. The shapes of the premaxillary and dentary bones within the beak have also never been characterised before in laying hens. Examining the bone shape is important as it has been suggested that it may influence the external beak shape to a certain extent. A pilot study was performed to determine if the analysis of the beak and its underlying bone shape defined and quantified by geometric morphometrics (GMM) of radiographic images was repeatable. Twenty-four hens were radiographed four times. Repeatability ranged from 0.52 to 0.81, demonstrating that imaging live hens over time and landmarking those images was repeatable. Using radiography and GMM, a study was conducted to characterise the variation in premaxillary and dentary bone shape within two pure lines of White Leghorn laying hens. Premaxillary bone shapes ranged from long and narrow with pointed bone tips to short and wide with more curved bone tips. Dentary bone shapes ranged from long and wide to short and narrow. For both bones, the shape differed between the two lines, and the size of the bone significantly affected its shape. The results showed that a range of shape phenotypes exist for both the premaxillary and dentary bone, which may influence beak shape. Photographs of the two pure lines were also taken to analyse the beak shape using GMM and examine the relationship between beak shape, the underlying bone shape, feather cover, and mortality. Maxillary beak shapes ranged from long and narrow with pointed beak tips to short and wide with more curved beak tips. The maxillary beak was moderately correlated to the premaxillary bone in shape and size. The shape data suggest distinct beak and bone phenotypes within each line for the beak and its underlying bones. In addition, feather cover and mortality differed between the two lines, with one line having better feather cover and lower mortality over the 100-week production cycle. Therefore, beak shape may be one factor contributing to the differences seen in feather cover and mortality. These distinct phenotypes could be selected to help reduce damage inflicted by severe feather pecking and improve laying hen welfare. Two studies were conducted to understand and quantify the physical damage different beak shapes can cause. The first study used live hens with either a sharp or blunt beak that pecked at "chicken" models (foam blocks covered with feathered chicken skin). The change in block and skin weight, the number of feathers removed from the skin, and the number of successful (resulting in feather or tissue removal) versus non-successful (no removal) pecks at the model were recorded. The change in block weight did not differ between the two groups; however, the sharp beak group had a larger change in skin weight and removed significantly more feathers than the blunt group. The mean number of pecks made at the model also did not differ between the beak shape groups; however, sharp beak hens had a greater percentage of successful pecks, while blunt beak hens had a greater percentage of non-successful pecks. The results of this study show that sharp beak hens were more capable of removing feathers and, by extension, tissue, thus resulting in damage. The second study used a robotic device to mimic a hen's natural pecking motion ex vivo. Using this device, chicken heads pecked into agarose gel, which mimics muscle, at three pecking forces. The depth and volume of the indentations into the gel were assessed to quantify damage. No differences in indentation depth or volume were found between the different beak shape groups. Pecking force did affect depth and volume; however, the results were inconsistent. The results of this study suggest that the beak shapes tested were perhaps too similar to discern differences. These two studies also suggest other factors beyond beak sharpness (i.e., the curvature of the maxillary beak over the mandibular beak), such as other beak shape characteristics or the motivation to perform the behaviour, contribute to feather removal and tissue damage. This project's results show that specific beak phenotypes within laying hen breeding lines could be incorporated into selection indices. This project provides a foundation for future genetic and behavioural research investigating the effect of beak shape on other beak-related behaviours like feeding and preening and identifying quantitative trait loci that underlie beak shape. More research is needed to examine the relationship between beak shape and its capacity to cause damage.
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- 2023
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3. Genetic parameter estimation and molecular foundation of chicken beak shape
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Anqi Chen, Xiaoyu Zhao, Junhui Wen, Xiurong Zhao, Gang Wang, Xinye Zhang, Xufang Ren, Yalan Zhang, Xue Cheng, Xiaofan Yu, Xiaohan Mei, Huie Wang, Menghan Guo, Xiaoyu Jiang, Guozhen Wei, Xue Wang, Runshen Jiang, Xing Guo, Zhonghua Ning, and Lujiang Qu
- Subjects
chicken ,beak shape ,heritability ,genome-wide association study ,Animal culture ,SF1-1100 - Abstract
ABSTRACT: The bird beak is mainly functioned as feeding and attacking, and its shape has extremely important significance for survival and reproduction. In chickens, since beak shape could lead to some disadvantages including pecking and waste of feed, it is important to understand the inheritance of chicken beak shape. In the present study, we firstly established 4 indicators to describe the chicken beak shapes, including upper beak length (UL), lower beak length (LL), distance between upper and lower beak tips (DB) and upper beak curvature (BC). And then, we measured the 4 beak shape indicators as well as some production traits including body weight (BW), shank length (SL), egg weight (EW), eggshell strength (ES) of a layer breed, Rhode Island Red (RIR), in order to estimate genetic parameters of chicken beak shape. The heritabilities of UL and LL were 0.41 and 0.37, and the heritabilities of DB and BC were 0.22 and 0.21, indicating that beak shape was a highly or mediumly heritable. There were significant positive genetic and phenotypic correlations among UL, LL, and DB. And UL was positively correlated with body weight (BW18) and shank length (SL18) at 18 weeks of age in genetics, and DB was positively correlated with BC in terms of genetics and phenotype. We also found that layers of chicken cages played a role on beak shape, which could be attributed to the difference of lightness in different cage layers. By a genome-wide association study (GWAS) for the chicken UL, we identified 9 significant candidate genes associated with UL in RIR. For the variants with low minor allele frequencies (MAF
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- 2024
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4. Introduced parasite changes host phenotype, mating signal and hybridization risk: Philornis downsi effects on Darwin's finch song
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Kleindorfer, Sonia, Custance, Georgina, Peters, Katharina J, and Sulloway, Frank J
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Zoology ,Ecology ,Biological Sciences ,Infectious Diseases ,Animal Communication ,Animals ,Biological Evolution ,Ecuador ,Finches ,Hybridization ,Genetic ,Larva ,Mating Preference ,Animal ,Muscidae ,Phenotype ,Species Specificity ,sexual selection ,Galapagos Islands ,Camarhynchus ,vocal deviation ,beak shape ,pairing success ,Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Agricultural ,veterinary and food sciences ,Biological sciences ,Environmental sciences - Abstract
Introduced parasites that alter their host's mating signal can change the evolutionary trajectory of a species through sexual selection. Darwin's Camarhynchus finches are threatened by the introduced fly Philornis downsi that is thought to have accidentally arrived on the Galapagos Islands during the 1960s. The P. downsi larvae feed on the blood and tissue of developing finches, causing on average approximately 55% in-nest mortality and enlarged naris size in survivors. Here we test if enlarged naris size is associated with song characteristics and vocal deviation in the small tree finch ( Camarhynchus parvulus), the critically endangered medium tree finch ( C. pauper) and the recently observed hybrid tree finch group ( Camarhynchus hybrids). Male C. parvulus and C. pauper with enlarged naris size produced song with lower maximum frequency and greater vocal deviation, but there was no significant association in hybrids. Less vocal deviation predicted faster pairing success in both parental species. Finally, C. pauper males with normal naris size produced species-specific song, but male C. pauper with enlarged naris size had song that was indistinguishable from other tree finches. When parasites disrupt host mating signal, they may also facilitate hybridization. Here we show how parasite-induced naris enlargement affects vocal quality, resulting in blurred species mating signals.
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- 2019
5. Research Note: Beak morphology of infrared beak–treated laying hens and its impact on production and welfare
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C. Hughes, S. Struthers, T. Shynkaruk, S. Gomis, A. Gupta, and K. Schwean-Lardner
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beak treatment ,behavior ,beak shape ,body weight ,shovel beak ,Animal culture ,SF1-1100 - Abstract
Despite previous research on the impacts of beak treatment on laying hens, little information exists regarding how variation in beak morphology that can occur following beak treatment affects production, behavior, and welfare. Following infrared beak treatment (IRBT), variations in beak shape, such as a shovel beak (bottom beak longer than top), cracks (Cr), or bubbles (B) may occur if the IRBT equipment is damaged or if a quality control program is not followed at the hatchery. This study aimed to determine if variations in beak morphology post-IRBT impacted laying hen production or welfare. Infrared beak-treated Lohmann LSL-Lite hens (n = 80) were selected from a 56-wk-old flock and randomly assigned into 1 of 8 treatments: flush beak (control), shovel beak extending 0–1 mm (SB0-1), 1–2 mm (SB1-2), 2–3 mm (SB2-3), 3–4 mm (SB3-4), or >4 mm (SB > 4), Cr, or B. Hens were housed in individual cages for 4 wk and production (body weight, feed intake, egg production, and egg quality), and welfare (behavior and histology) parameters were evaluated. Consumption of different particle sizes was assessed by measuring feed particle size of refused feed. Data were analyzed as a one-way ANOVA, in a completely randomized design using PROC GLM (SAS 9.4). The results indicated that the beak morphologies examined had minimal effects on the production or welfare of the hens. Histological assessment did not show the presence of neuromas in the beak tissue, suggesting that the hens were not experiencing chronic pain from the IRBT procedure.
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- 2020
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6. The effect of infrared beak treatment on the welfare of turkeys reared to 12 weeks of age
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S. Struthers, T. Fiss, H.L. Classen, S. Gomis, R. Dickinson, T.G. Crowe, E. Herwig, and K. Schwean-Lardner
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beak ,behavior ,histology ,turkey poult ,beak shape ,Animal culture ,SF1-1100 - Abstract
ABSTRACT: This study aimed to determine the effects of infrared beak treatment on the behavior and welfare of male and female turkeys reared to 12 wk of age. To do this, poults (236 males and 324 females) were assigned to one of 2 beak treatments: infrared beak treated on day of hatch (IR) or sham untreated control (C). Data collected included heterophil/lymphocyte (H/L) ratio, pecking force, feather cover, behavioral expression, and beak histology. Data were analyzed as a 2 × 2 factorial of beak treatment and gender, in a completely randomized design and analyzed using PROC MIXED (SAS 9.4). H/L ratio (indicative of a stress response) did not differ between treated and control poults during early life, except at 20 d of age when H/L ratio was higher for C poults than IR poults. Pecking force, measured as a method of monitoring pain, was different only at 1 wk of age, when IR poults pecked with more force than C poults. Feather cover was better in IR poults at 12 wk of age. Differences in behavior between treatments were minor over the 12-wk period. Overall, infrared beak treatment of commercial turkeys had minimal negative impacts on behavior and welfare. The results suggest that stress may be reduced in flocks that are beak treated and that the procedure itself does not cause a pain response.
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- 2022
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7. The impact of infrared beak treatment on turkey tom and hen beak length and performance to 12 weeks of age
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S. Struthers, T. Fiss, H.L. Classen, S. Gomis, E. Herwig, and K. Schwean-Lardner
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beak shape ,body weight ,feed intake ,injurious pecking ,poult ,Animal culture ,SF1-1100 - Abstract
ABSTRACT: Controlling injurious pecking in commercial turkeys remains a significant challenge to producers and the industry. Infrared beak treatment is an effective method of controlling injurious pecking in chickens; however, the effects of infrared beak treatment on turkey performance are still largely unknown. Two experiments were conducted to determine the impact of infrared beak treatment on the beak length and performance of turkeys raised to 12 wk of age. Experiment 1 tested both toms (n = 236) and hens (n = 324), while Experiment 2 focused on hens (n = 608). Poults for each experiment were assigned to 1 of 2 beak treatments: infrared beak treated (IR) on the day of hatch at a commercial hatchery or sham untreated control (C). Data collected included beak length, body weight, feed intake, feed efficiency, and mortality. Data were analyzed using a 1 or 2-way ANOVA, followed by Tukey's range test for mean separation when interactions were found. Results showed that beak length (Experiment 1 only) was significantly shorter in IR poults from 2 to 12 wk of age. In the same experiment, IR toms had lighter body weight than C toms, but IR hens were heavier than C hens from 2 to 4 wk of age. By 12 wk, IR poults were heavier than C poults, regardless of gender. In experiment 2, IR hens had lighter body weight from 2 to 4 wk of age. In conclusion, infrared beak treatment had minimal effects on feed intake, feed efficiency, or mortality over the 12-wk periods of both experiments.
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- 2022
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8. Crossbills and Conifer Cones
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Pastor, John and Pastor, John
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- 2016
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9. Evolution of a multifunctional trait: shared effects of foraging ecology and thermoregulation on beak morphology, with consequences for song evolution.
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Friedman, Nicholas R., Miller, Eliot T., Ball, Jason R., Kasuga, Haruka, Remeš, Vladimír, and Economo, Evan P.
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BEAKS , *ECOLOGY , *BODY temperature regulation , *BIRDSONGS , *MORPHOLOGY , *GEOMETRIC shapes - Abstract
While morphological traits are often associated with multiple functions, it remains unclear how evolution balances the selective effects of different functions. Birds' beaks function not only in foraging but also in thermoregulating and singing, among other behaviours. Studies of beak evolution abound, however, most focus on a single function. Hence, we quantified relative contributions of different functions over an evolutionary timescale. We measured beak shape using geometric morphometrics and compared this trait with foraging behaviour, climatic variables and song characteristics in a phylogenetic comparative study of an Australasian radiation of songbirds (Meliphagidae). We found that both climate and foraging behaviour were significantly correlated with the beak shape and size. However, foraging ecology had a greater effect on shape, and climate had a nearly equal effect on size. We also found that evolutionary changes in beak morphology had significant consequences for vocal performance: species with elongate-shaped beaks sang at higher frequencies, while species with large beaks sang at a slower pace. The evolution of the avian beak exemplifies how morphological traits can be an evolutionary compromise among functions, and suggests that specialization along any functional axis may increase ecological divergence or reproductive isolation along others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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10. The impact of beak tissue sloughing and beak shape variation on the behavior and welfare of infrared beak-treated layer pullets and hens.
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Struthers, S, Classen, H.L., Gomis, S, Crowe, T.G., and Schwean-Lardner, K
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BEAKS , *TUKEY'S test , *HENS - Abstract
This research examined how infrared beak treatment (IRBT), sloughing of the treated beak tissue, and the variations in beak shape that can occur post-IRBT impact the welfare and mortality of Lohmann LSL-Lite (LW) and Lohmann Brown (LB) pullets and hens. Two experiments were conducted and birds for both experiments were treated on the day of hatch. IRBT equipment settings were adjusted to create 4 specific beak shapes: shovel (SHV), step (STP), standard (STAN), and an untreated sham control (C). Experiment 1 pullets (n = 80 per strain) were reared in bioassay cages from 1 to 29 D of age (4 replicates per treatment). Data collected included time and presence of beak sloughing, pecking force, behavioral expression, and mortality. Experiment 2 pullets (n = 320 per strain) were reared in floor pens from 1 D to 18 wk of age (2 replicates per treatment) and then conventional cages from 18 to 60 wk of age (6 replicates per treatment). Data collected for Experiment 2 included behavioral expression, feather cover, comb damage, and mortality. Data were analyzed using PROC MIXED (SAS® 9.4) with Tukey's test to separate means. Differences were significant when P ≤ 0.05. IRBT and sloughing had no effect on pecking force or mortality throughout rearing. The variations in post-IRBT beak shape had minor effects on behavior. During rearing, STAN pullets were more active than C pullets but STP and STAN pullets performed less exploratory pecking. During the laying period, SHV and STP hens preened more than C hens. The IRBT treatments, regardless of beak shape, reduced feather loss, comb damage, and cannibalism-related mortality during the laying period. Overall, the results indicate that LW and LB pullets and hens can cope with the change in beak shape that occurs with IRBT, and that welfare is not negatively impacted if some variation in beak shape occurs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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11. The effect of beak tissue sloughing and post-treatment beak shape on the productivity of infrared beak-treated layer pullets and hens.
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Struthers, S, Classen, H L, Gomis, S, and Schwean-Lardner, K
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NIPPLE (Anatomy) , *BEAKS , *ANIMAL weaning , *AGRICULTURAL egg production , *HENS , *EGG quality , *BODY weight - Abstract
Infrared beak treatment (IRBT) results in a change in beak shape; however, it is unclear what effect variations in post-treatment beak shape have on young pullets. Additionally, the impact of sloughing of the treated beak tissue is not fully understood. Two experiments were conducted to determine the effects of beak tissue sloughing and post-treatment beak shape on the productivity of infrared beak-treated Lohmann Brown (LB) and Lohmann LSL-Lite (LW) pullets and hens. Birds were treated on day of hatch and IRBT equipment settings were adjusted to create 4 specific beak shapes: shovel (SHV), step (STP), standard (STAN), and an untreated sham control (C). Experiment 1 pullets (n = 160) were housed in cages from 1 to 29 d of age and had access to water through chick founts or 360° nipple drinkers (2 replicate cages per treatment). Data collected included body weight (BW), feed intake (FI), feed efficiency (FE), and water disappearance (WD). Experiment 2 pullets (n = 640) were housed in floor pens from 1 d to 18 wk of age (2 replicate pens per treatment) then conventional cages during the laying period (6 replicate cages per treatment). Data collected included BW, FI, egg production, and egg quality. Data were analyzed using PROC MIXED (SAS® 9.4) and differences were significant when P ≤ 0.05. During early life, the IRBT treatments and sloughing had minor effects on FI, FE, and BW. At 4 wk of age, STAN pullets were lighter than C pullets; however, differences were no longer apparent after this age. Pullets with STP or STAN beak shapes had lower WD than C pullets when allowed access to water via nipple drinkers but this did not result in reduced growth. Throughout the laying period, SHV hens laid more saleable eggs than C hens, with no other effects on production. Overall, variations in beak shape and sloughing of the beak tissue had minimal impacts on the productivity of LW and LB pullets and hens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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12. The evolutionary relationship among beak shape, mechanical advantage, and feeding ecology in modern birds*.
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Navalón, Guillermo, Bright, Jen A., Marugán‐Lobón, Jesús, and Rayfield, Emily J.
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BIOLOGICAL adaptation , *BIRDS , *ANIMAL feeding behavior , *BEAKS , *MACROEVOLUTION - Abstract
Extensive research on avian adaptive radiations has led to a presumption that beak morphology predicts feeding ecology in birds. However, this ecomorphological relationship has only been quantified in a handful of avian lineages, where associations are of variable strength, and never at a broad macroevolutionary scale. Here, we used shape analysis and phylogenetic comparative methods to quantify the relationships among beak shape, mechanical advantage, and two measures of feeding ecology (feeding behavior and semiquantitative dietary preferences) in a broad sample of modern birds, comprising most living orders. We found a complex relationship, with most variables showing a significant relationship with feeding ecology but little explanatory power. For example, diet accounts for less than 12% of beak shape variation. Similar beak shapes are associated with disparate dietary regimes, even when accounting for diet‐feeding behavior relationships and phylogeny. Very few lineages optimize for stronger bite forces, with most birds exhibiting relatively fast, weak bites, even in large predatory taxa. The extreme morphological and behavioral flexibility of the beak in birds suggests that, far from being an exemplary feeding adaptation, avian beak diversification may have been largely contingent on trade‐offs and constraints. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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13. Genomic Contingencies and the Potential for Local Adaptation in a Hybrid Species.
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Runemark, Anna, Fernández, Laura Piñeiro, Eroukhmanoff, Fabrice, and Sætre, Glenn-Peter
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GENOMICS , *GENETICS , *SPARROWS , *SPECIES hybridization , *EVOLUTIONARY theories , *ANIMAL reproduction , *MORPHOLOGY - Abstract
Hybridization is increasingly recognized as a potent evolutionary force. Although additive genetic variation and novel combinations of parental genes theoretically increase the potential for hybrid species to adapt, few empirical studies have investigated the adaptive potential within a hybrid species. Here, we address whether genomic contingencies, adaptation to climate, or diet best explain divergence in beak morphology using genomically diverged island populations of the homoploid hybrid Italian sparrow Passer italiae from Crete, Corsica, and Sicily. Populations vary significantly in beak morphology both between and within islands of origin. Temperature seasonality best explains population divergence in beak size. Interestingly, beak shape along all significant dimensions of variation was best explained by annual precipitation, genomic composition, and their interaction, suggesting a role for contingencies. Moreover, beak shape similarity to a parent species correlates with proportion of the genome inherited from that species, consistent with the presence of contingencies. In conclusion, adaptation to local conditions and genomic contingencies arising from putatively independent hybridization events jointly explain beak morphology in the Italian sparrow. Hence, hybridization may induce contingencies and restrict evolution in certain directions dependent on the genetic background. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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14. A population founded by a single pair of individuals: Establishment, expansion, and evolution
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Grant, Peter R., Grant, B. Rosemary, Petren, Kenneth, Hendry, A. P., editor, and Kinnison, M. T., editor
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- 2001
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15. Evaluation of stock variation and sexual dimorphism of beak shape of neon flying squid, Ommastrephes bartramii, based on geometric morphometrics.
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Fang, Zhou, Chen, Xinjun, Su, Hang, Thompson, Katherine, and Chen, Yong
- Subjects
- *
OMMASTREPHES bartramii , *SEXUAL dimorphism in animals , *MOLLUSKS , *ANIMAL variation , *MOLLUSK morphology , *COLOR variation (Biology) - Abstract
Variability in the shape of hard structures such as mandibles (beaks) due to stock variation or sexual dimorphism is common in cephalopods, and could prove useful in the discrimination of stocks or sexes. In this study, geometric morphometrics of upper and lower beak's shape are used to analyze the variation between sexes and stocks in Ommastrephes bartramii of the northwestern Pacific Ocean. This species is targeted by the Chinese jigging fleet during the fishing period May-October 2013. Variation in the beak's pigmentation stage was also investigated. According to our analyses, upper and lower beak shapes of O. bartramii differed significantly between eastern and western stocks of O. bartramii (MANCOVA, P < 0.01), and different allometric growths were also detected. The degree of pigmentation by pigmentation stage, changed in upper beaks between the two stocks and in lower beaks with beak size. In the western stock, only lower beak shape and pigmentation stages of upper beak shape showed significant differences between sexes, while the degree of pigmentation stage changed with different beak sizes in the lower beak. Squid stocks could be effectively identified based on the results of a principal component analysis of beak shape, but sexes could not be identified with this technique. We hypothesize that reason for these differences may be caused by the variation of feeding habits between stocks but the sharing of a similar habitat by both sexes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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16. Is Morphometry an Indicator of the Number of Sexy Syllables in the Song of Yellow-Fronted Canary (Serinus mozambicus)?
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Adoté Hervé Gildas. Akueson, Ayédèguè Eustache Alaye, and A. Y. J. Akossou
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Climate zones ,yellow-fronted canary ,Serinus mozambicus ,Ecology ,QH301-705.5 ,Ecological Modeling ,Zoology ,Biology ,Beak shape ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Categorization ,Habitat ,agroecological zone ,Benin ,song ,Biology (General) ,Predator ,morphometry ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Birds use song for several goals as defending territory, alerting a partner to the presence of a predator, or wooing a female for breeding. This study aims to identify the morphometric parameters which determine the variability of the number of syllables in the “sexy” songs of yellow-fronted canary. For this purpose, sixteen morphometric parameters were measured among 170 yellow-fronted canaries captured, in four agroecological zones in North Benin. The results showed that the morphometry of yellow-fronted canary varies according to its habitat and the type of song. The categorization of the sample studied allowed to retain two groups which differ in the importance of body characters and the number of sexy syllables issued when singing. Yellow-fronted canaries from the Sudanese climate zone not only have superior morphometric characters compared to other zones, but also have a song composed of several different sexy syllables. A binary logistic regression model with selection of variables revealed that the index of beak shape, abdomen length, and tail length are the determining characteristics of the number of sexy syllables. These results are needed for future breeding and conservation studies of the species.
- Published
- 2021
17. Beak morphology and limb proportions as adaptations of hadrosaurid foraging ecology.
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Takasaki, Ryuji and Kobayashi, Yoshitsugu
- Abstract
Hadrosauridae, consisting of two subfamilies (Hadrosaurinae and Lambeosaurinae), is a successful herbivorous dinosaur group that established a high taxonomic diversity and a cosmopolitan biogeographic distribution during the Late Cretaceous. While its success is often attributed to a highly specialized oral processing system, the foraging strategy of this group remains unclear. This study focuses on two critical factors in foraging strategy, food selectivity and locomotor ecology, in these hadrosaurid subfamilies. Three-dimensional beak shapes and limb segment proportions are used as the proxies for food selectivity and locomotor ecology, respectively. The beak shape analysis demonstrates trends of anteriorly acute beaks in hadrosaurines and anteriorly wide beaks in lambeosaurines. The limb segment proportion analysis shows short proximal limb segments in hadrosaurines and long proximal limb segments in lambeosaurines. These results suggest that hadrosaurines preferred selective consumption of high-quality food with energy-inefficient locomotor ecology, while lambeosaurines preferred mass consumption of low-quality food with energy-efficient locomotion and that differences in foraging strategy might have enhanced dietary niche partitioning in the subfamily level of hadrosaurids. In addition, this study tests a relationship between limb proportions and habitat environments in hadrosaurids. We demonstrate that hadrosaurids from the coastal environments have shorter forelimbs than those from the terrestrial environment. Since short forelimbs are better suited for temporal bipedalism than long forelimbs, the limb proportion difference may indicate adaptations to different feeding heights, possibly due to different regional vegetations. • Hadrosaurid beak shape and limb segment proportions differ between subfamilies. • Hadrosaurines likely preferred high quality food and had inefficient locomotion. • Lambeosaurines likely had low quality food but efficient locomotor ecology. • The ecomorphology difference likely induced niche partitioning. • Hadrosaurids from inland had longer forelimb, which may better fit quadrupedality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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18. Genetic analysis of multiple fruit quality traits in mango across sites and years
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I. S. E. Bally and Joanne De Faveri
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,media_common.quotation_subject ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,Horticulture ,Heritability ,Biology ,Beak shape ,01 natural sciences ,Genetic analysis ,Multiple fruit ,Breed Trait ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Genetics ,Trait ,Quality (business) ,Cultivar ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,010606 plant biology & botany ,media_common - Abstract
A key strategy to improve fruit quality and consumer appeal in mangoes is to breed trait improvements into new cultivars. There are several key fruit quality traits in mango. Knowledge of the heritability and relationship among these traits is important for breeding success. This paper implements a linear mixed model analysis including paternal information for analysis of 13 important fruit quality traits from mango cultivars planted across three environments and assessed over several seasons. The traits analysed were average fruit weight, skin background colour, blush colour, percentage blush, blush intensity, skin thickness, beak shape, stem-end shape, deformities, mesocarp colour, mesocarp texture, seed width and mesocarp recovery. The analysis allows investigation into trait heritabilities and stability of traits over years and sites, as well as genetic correlations among traits.
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- 2021
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19. Review: Key tweaks to the chicken's beak: the versatile use of the beak by avian species and potential approaches for improvements in poultry production
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A.F. Moss and A. Iqbal
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animal structures ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Pecking order ,Zoology ,Biology ,Beak shape ,SF1-1100 ,Poultry ,Heat stress ,Predation ,0403 veterinary science ,Animals ,Animal Husbandry ,Mating ,Pecking ,Feather pecking ,Behavior, Animal ,Feeding ,Morphometry ,Beak ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Cannibalism ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Feathers ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Animal culture ,body regions ,Phenotype ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Chickens - Abstract
The avian beak is a multipurpose organ playing a vital role in a variety of functions, including feeding, drinking, playing, grasping objects, mating, nesting, preening and defence against predators and parasites. With regards to poultry production, the beak is the first point of contact between the bird and feed. The beak is also manipulated to prevent unwanted behaviour such as feather pecking, toe pecking and cannibalism in poultry as well as head/neck injuries to breeder hens during mating. Thus, investigating the beak morphometry of poultry in relation to feeding and other behaviours may lead to novel insights for poultry breeding, management and feeding strategies. Beak morphometry data may be captured by advanced imaging techniques coupled with the use of geometric morphometric techniques. This emerging technology may be utilized to study the effects of beak shape on many critical management issues including heat stress, parasite management, pecking and feeding behaviour. In addition, existing literature identifies several genes related to beak development in chickens and other avian species. Use of morphometric assessments to develop phenotypic data on beak shape and detailed studies on beak-related behaviours in chickens may help in improving management and welfare of commercial poultry.
- Published
- 2021
20. Beak and skull shapes of human commensal and non-commensal house sparrows Passer domesticus
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Beak shape ,Geometric morphometrics ,Granivorous bird ,Passer domesticus ,Human commensalism - Published
- 2021
21. Effect of Species Interaction on Beak Integration in an Avian Hybrid Species Complex.
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Eroukhmanoff, F., Elgvin, T., Gonzàlez Rojas, M., Haas, F., Hermansen, J., and Sætre, G.-P.
- Abstract
Theory predicts that variability in size and the shape of a morphological trait should often be stable both at the intra- and interspecific level. We studied variation in beak integration among several populations of two species of the genus Passer, a hybrid species, the Italian sparrow ( Passer italiae) and one of its parents, the Spanish sparrow ( Passer hispaniolensis). We show that the general shape of the beak has been conserved in these two species and that hybrid speciation has had no major effects on beak integration. However, in young, sympatric populations, phenotypic integration between beak height and length decreased significantly, to the extent that these two dimensions apparently became independent. This displacement in phenotypic integration seems to be accompanied with changes in the distribution of phenotypic variation at the univariate level. This suggests that while beak shape may have been constrained over evolutionary time-scales and major hybridization events (i.e. the formation of the hybrid Italian sparrow), under specific selection regimes linked to secondary contact, it can evolve rapidly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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22. Allometry and integration do not strongly constrain beak shape evolution in large-billed (Corvus macrorhynchos ) and carrion crows (Corvus corone )
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Masayoshi Tokita, Sou Aoki, and Takeshi Yamasaki
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Ecology ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Computed tomography ,Beak shape ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Corvus macrorhynchos ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Morphological integration ,Evolutionary biology ,medicine ,Carrion ,Allometry ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
A recent geometric morphometric study on certain landbird lineages revealed that a major part of the variation in beak shape is accounted for by skull size and cranial shape. The study interpreted this result as evidence for the presence of strong evolutionary constraints that severely prevented beak shape from evolving substantially away from predictions of allometry and morphological integration. However, there is another overlooked but similarly plausible explanation for this result: The reason why beak shape does not depart much from predictions might simply be that selection pressures favoring such changes in shape are themselves rare. Here, to evaluate the intensity of evolutionary constraints on avian beak shape more appropriately, we selected large-billed (Corvus macrorhynchos) and carrion crows (Corvus corone) as study objects. These landbird species seem to experience selection pressures favoring a departure from an allometric trajectory. A landmark-based geometric morphometric approach using three-dimensional reconstructions of CT scan images revealed that only 45.4% of the total shape variation was explained by allometry and beak-braincase integration. This suggests that when a selection pressure acts in a different direction to allometry and integration, avian beak shape can react to it and evolve flexibly. As traditionally considered, evolutionary constraints on avian beak shape might not be all that strong.
- Published
- 2018
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23. Determining the variation in premaxillary and dentary bone morphology that may underlie beak shape between two pure layer lines
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Sarah Struthers, Ian C. Dunn, Peter W.F. Wilson, Heather McCormack, Björn Andersson, Victoria Sandilands, M. Schmutz, and Jeffrey J. Schoenebeck
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animal structures ,MANAGEMENT AND PRODUCTION ,laying hen ,Biology ,Beak shape ,SF1-1100 ,Lohmann ,principal components analysis ,Animals ,Bone shape ,Process (anatomy) ,Morphometrics ,Feather pecking ,Bone morphology ,Beak ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Feathers ,Animal culture ,body regions ,bone shape ,Variation (linguistics) ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Chickens ,radiography - Abstract
Beak treatment is an effective method of reducing the damage inflicted by severe feather pecking (SFP) but there is significant pressure to eliminate these treatments and rely solely on alternative strategies. Substantial variation in beak shape exists within non-beak treated layer flocks and beak shape appears to be heritable. There is the potential to use this pre-existing variation and genetically select for hens whose beak shapes are less apt to cause damage during SFP. To do this, we must first understand the range of phenotypes that exist for both the external beak shape and the bones that provide its structure. The objective of this study was to determine the variation in premaxillary (within the top beak) and dentary (within the bottom beak) bone morphology that exists in 2 non-beak treated pure White Leghorn layer lines using geometric morphometrics to analyze radiographs. Lateral head radiographs were taken of 825 hens and the premaxillary and dentary bones were landmarked. Landmark coordinates were standardized by Procrustes superimposition and the covariation was analyzed by principal components analysis and multivariate regression using Geomorph (an R package). Three principal components (PCs) explained 85% of total premaxillary bone shape variation and showed that the shape ranged from long and narrow with pointed bone tips to short and wide with more curved tips. Two PCs explained 81% of total dentary bone shape variation. PC1 described the dentary bone length and width and PC2 explained the angle between the bone tip and its articular process. For both bones, shape was significantly associated with bone size and differed significantly between the two lines. Bone size accounted for 42% of the total shape variation for both bones. Together, the results showed a range of phenotypic variation in premaxillary and dentary bone shape, which in turn may influence beak shape. These bone phenotypes will guide further quantitative genetic and behavioral analyses that will help identify which beaks shapes cause the least damage when birds engage in SFP.
- Published
- 2021
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24. Beak and skull shapes of human commensal and non-commensal house sparrows Passer domesticus.
- Author
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Riyahi, Sepand, Hammer, Øyvind, Arbabi, Tayebeh, Sánchez, Antonio, Roselaar, Cees S., Aliabadian, Mansour, and Sætre, Glenn-Peter
- Subjects
- *
PASSERIFORMES , *SONGBIRDS , *SEED pods , *HUMAN geography , *LAND settlement - Abstract
Background: The granivorous house sparrow Passer domesticus is thought to have developed its commensal relationship with humans with the rise of agriculture in the Middle East some 10,000 years ago, and to have expanded with the spread of agriculture in Eurasia during the last few thousand years. One subspecies, P. d. bactrianus, residing in Central Asia, has apparently maintained the ancestral ecology, however. This subspecies is not associated with human settlements; it is migratory and lives in natural grass- and wetland habitats feeding on wild grass seeds. It is well documented that the agricultural revolution was associated with an increase in grain size and changes in seed structure in cultivated cereals, the preferred food source of commensal house sparrow. Accordingly, we hypothesize that correlated changes may have occurred in beak and skull morphology as adaptive responses to the change in diet. Here, we test this hypothesis by comparing the skull shapes of 101 house sparrows from Iran, belonging to five different subspecies, including the non-commensal P. d. bactrianus, using geometric morphometrics. Results: The various commensal house sparrow subspecies share subtle but consistent skeletal features that differ significantly from those of the non-commensal P. d. bactrianus. Although there is a marked overall size allometry in the data set, the shape difference between the ecologically differentiated sparrows cannot be explained by differences in size alone. Relative to the size allometry commensal house sparrows exhibit a skull shape consistent with accelerated development (heterochrony), resulting in a more robust facial cranium and a larger, more pointed beak. Conclusion: The difference in skull shape and robustness of the beak between commensal and non-commensal house sparrows is consistent with adaptations to process the larger and rachis encapsulated seeds of domesticated cereals among human associated populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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25. Chapter 2 The Evolution of Song in the Phylloscopus Leaf Warblers (Aves: Sylviidae): A Tale of Sexual Selection, Habitat Adaptation, and Morphological Constraints.
- Author
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Mahler, Bettina and Gil, Diego
- Abstract
Abstract: Differences in song between species of birds are often the most reliable criteria by which to identify them. Thus, the study of the evolution of bird song provides biologists with a powerful insight into the nature of speciation processes. Both adaptive and nonadaptive explanations have been proposed to account for the evolution of song differences in birds. In this study, we put several of these hypotheses to a test in the genus Phylloscopus, a species-rich group of Old World leaf warblers in which song is used by males for mate attraction and territory defense. We found that song characteristics contained significant amounts of phylogenetic information, although they were more labile than morphological traits. Song frequency characteristics were more phylogenetically preserved than temporal or song structure traits. Changes in body size between species were correlated with changes in maximum and minimum frequencies and frequency bandwidth: small-bodied species had higher frequencies and wider bandwidths than large-bodied species. Beak shape was not found to limit overall frequency patterns. We used an ecomorphological correlate of habitat use, the tarsus/beak ratio, to test for song adaptation to specific habitat sound transmission characteristics. We found that species with larger tarsus/beak ratio, typically inhabiting broadleaf habitats and understory vegetation, had lower emphasized frequencies in their songs, as expected if songs are adapted to maximize sound transmission. However, this relationship did not held when controlling for common descent. Song complexity, a wide-ranging measurement encompassing temporal and structural sound complexity estimates, was best explained by breeding latitude. We interpret this relationship as a correlate of increased sexual selection by mate choice toward more Northern latitudes. We failed to find a significant role of character displacement in the evolution of song in this group: sympatric pairs of species did not show larger differences in song than allopatric pairs of species. To sum up, superimposing upon large haphazard selection of song themes, selective pressures for higher song elaboration in areas of high sexual selection, and correlative change in song brought about by natural selection of body size, would explain some of the diversity of songs that are found within the genus Phylloscopus. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
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26. Smaller beaks for colder winters: Thermoregulation drives beak size evolution in Australasian songbirds
- Author
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Evan P. Economo, Vladimír Remeš, Lenka Harmáčková, and Nicholas R. Friedman
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Maximum temperature ,biology ,Ecology ,Foraging ,Niche ,Meliphagoidea ,Thermoregulation ,biology.organism_classification ,Beak shape ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Beak ,Genetics ,Allen's rule ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Birds' beaks play a key role in foraging, and most research on their size and shape has focused on this function. Recent findings suggest that beaks may also be important for thermoregulation, and this may drive morphological evolution as predicted by Allen's rule. However, the role of thermoregulation in the evolution of beak size across species remains largely unexplored. In particular, it remains unclear whether the need for retaining heat in the winter or dissipating heat in the summer plays the greater role in selection for beak size. Comparative studies are needed to evaluate the relative importance of these functions in beak size evolution. We addressed this question in a clade of birds exhibiting wide variation in their climatic niche: the Australasian honeyeaters and allies (Meliphagoidea). Across 158 species, we compared species' climatic conditions extracted from their ranges to beak size measurements in a combined spatial-phylogenetic framework. We found that winter minimum temperature was positively correlated with beak size, while summer maximum temperature was not. This suggests that while diet and foraging behavior may drive evolutionary changes in beak shape, changes in beak size can also be explained by the beak's role in thermoregulation, and winter heat retention in particular.
- Published
- 2017
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27. A developing paradigm for the development of bird beaks.
- Author
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Grant, Peter R., Grant, B. Rosemary, and Abzhanov, Arkhat
- Subjects
- *
MOLECULAR genetics , *PHENOTYPES , *GROUND finches , *MORPHOLOGY , *BIOLOGICAL evolution , *MOLECULES - Abstract
Some adaptive radiations are notable for extreme interspecific diversification in one or a few adult traits. How and why have trait differences evolved? Natural and sexual selection often provide answers to the question of why. An answer to the question of how is to be found in the genetic control of the phenotypic traits, especially in the early stages of development, when interspecific differences first become expressed. Recent studies of the molecular genetic control of beak development in Darwin's finches have shown that a signalling molecule (BMP4) plays a key role in the development of large and deep beaks. Expression of this molecule occurs earlier (heterochrony) and at higher levels in species with deep beaks compared with species with more pointed beaks. The implication of this finding is that variation in the regulation of one or a few genes that are expressed early could be the source of evolutionarily significant variation that is subject to natural selection in speciation and adaptive radiation. This view is reinforced by parallel findings with the same signalling molecule in the development of jaw morphology in cichlid fish of the Great Lakes of Africa. Further research into regulatory mechanisms is to be expected, as well as extension to other examples of radiation such as honeycreepers in Hawaii and Anolis lizards in the Caribbean. © 2006 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2006, 88, 17–22. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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28. Feeding ecology is the primary driver of beak shape diversification in waterfowl
- Author
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Aaron M. Olsen
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Herbivore ,biology ,Ecology ,Zoology ,Beak shape ,biology.organism_classification ,Anseriformes ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Beak ,Waterfowl ,Presbyornis ,Adaptation ,Feeding ecology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Summary The diversity of beak shapes among birds is often assumed to be largely the result of adaptations to different feeding behaviors and diets. However, this assumption has only been tested for a small subset of avian diversity, primarily within the order Passeriformes. Moreover, given the role of the beak in behaviors other than feeding and given that most previously identified beak-feeding associations concern beak size rather than shape, it remains unclear how much of beak shape diversity is explained by feeding ecology and what functional explanations account for these differences in shape. I quantified the association between beak shape and feeding ecology for 42 species in the bird order Anseriformes (waterfowl) using 3D curvature of the upper beak collected from museum specimens and continuous dietary data compiled from the literature. I also tested whether leverage or stress resistance of the beak explains the association between beak shape and feeding ecology. Diet is strongly and significantly correlated with beak shape in waterfowl. An ancestral beak shape reconstruction and the reconstructed diet of the anseriform fossil Presbyornis both support filter-feeding as ancestral for most waterfowl, followed by multiple, significantly convergent transitions from a duck-like beak toward a more goose-like beak. The evolution of a more goose-like beak is associated with increased consumption of leaves, decreased consumption of invertebrates, and an increase in mechanical advantage of the beak. Moreover, no association was identified between size (measured as either beak size or body mass) and feeding ecology nor between size and beak shape. These results demonstrate that feeding ecology has acted as the primary selective force in the diversification of waterfowl beak shapes, including the convergent originations of geese. Thus, rapid and convergent adaptation of the beak to feeding is not limited to passerines nor is it limited to size-correlated shape changes. The positive evolutionary correlation between mechanical advantage and herbivory shows that lever mechanics can explain the functional evolution of the kinetic upper beak in birds. These results also suggest that functions of the beak other than feeding may play a minor role in explaining overall beak shape diversity. A lay summary is available for this article.
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
29. A population founded by a single pair of individuals: establishment, expansion, and evolution.
- Author
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Grant, Peter, Grant, B., and Petren, Kenneth
- Abstract
Events occurring at the founding of a population, and in the next few generations, are potentially of great importance for the future evolution of the population. This study reports demographic, genetic, and morphological changes that took place during and after the colonization of the small Galápagos island of Daphne Major by three male and two female large ground finches, Geospiza magnirostris, at the end of 1982. Using assignment tests with microsatellite DNA data we demonstrate heterogeneity among the immigrants. Their sources included both a near island (Santa Cruz) and a far island (Marchena). However, almost all immigrants that stayed to breed were from an intermediate island (Santiago) and its satellites. Song may have been responsible for this selectivity. Mean heterozygosity stayed roughly constant over the next 15 years while allelic diversity almost doubled, after an initial decline, as the breeding population increased to a maximum of 30 pairs. Although close inbreeding occurred, with a reduction in heterozygosity, an expected net decline in heterozygosity did not occur, for two reasons: it was counteracted by continuing gene flow from immigrants at a low rate, and inbred birds (in one cohort) were at a selective disadvantage. An abrupt step-function shift in beak shape occurred after 9 years. Thus the study provides evidence of drift and selection causing morphological and genetic divergence in the establishment of a new population and in the first few generations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
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30. Research Note: Beak morphology of infrared beak-treated laying hens and its impact on production and welfare
- Author
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Susantha Gomis, Tory Shynkaruk, S Struthers, Cara Hughes, Ashish Gupta, and Karen Schwean-Lardner
- Subjects
Biology ,Management and Production ,Beak shape ,Body weight ,Animal Welfare ,03 medical and health sciences ,body weight ,Animal science ,Animals ,Animal Husbandry ,lcsh:SF1-1100 ,030304 developmental biology ,Ovum ,0303 health sciences ,behavior ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Beak ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,General Medicine ,040201 dairy & animal science ,shovel beak ,beak shape ,beak treatment ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Female ,lcsh:Animal culture ,Flock ,Chickens - Abstract
Despite previous research on the impacts of beak treatment on laying hens, little information exists regarding how variation in beak morphology that can occur following beak treatment affects production, behavior, and welfare. Following infrared beak treatment (IRBT), variations in beak shape, such as a shovel beak (bottom beak longer than top), cracks (Cr), or bubbles (B) may occur if the IRBT equipment is damaged or if a quality control program is not followed at the hatchery. This study aimed to determine if variations in beak morphology post-IRBT impacted laying hen production or welfare. Infrared beak-treated Lohmann LSL-Lite hens (n = 80) were selected from a 56-wk-old flock and randomly assigned into 1 of 8 treatments: flush beak (control), shovel beak extending 0–1 mm (SB0-1), 1–2 mm (SB1-2), 2–3 mm (SB2-3), 3–4 mm (SB3-4), or >4 mm (SB > 4), Cr, or B. Hens were housed in individual cages for 4 wk and production (body weight, feed intake, egg production, and egg quality), and welfare (behavior and histology) parameters were evaluated. Consumption of different particle sizes was assessed by measuring feed particle size of refused feed. Data were analyzed as a one-way ANOVA, in a completely randomized design using PROC GLM (SAS 9.4). The results indicated that the beak morphologies examined had minimal effects on the production or welfare of the hens. Histological assessment did not show the presence of neuromas in the beak tissue, suggesting that the hens were not experiencing chronic pain from the IRBT procedure.
- Published
- 2019
31. The multifactorial nature of beak and skull shape evolution in parrots and cockatoos (Psittaciformes)
- Author
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Emily J. Rayfield, Jen A. Bright, S. N. Cobb, and Jesús Marugán-Lobón
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Cranial morphology ,animal structures ,Evolution ,Integration ,Cockatoos ,Biology ,Beak shape ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Birds ,03 medical and health sciences ,Parrots ,Phylogenetics ,QH359-425 ,medicine ,Animals ,Least-Squares Analysis ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Phylogeny ,Geometric morphometrics ,Allometry ,Principal Component Analysis ,Feeding ,Skull ,Beak ,Biological Evolution ,Evolvability ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Evolutionary biology ,Psittaciformes ,Research Article - Abstract
Background The Psittaciformes (parrots and cockatoos) are characterised by their large beaks, and are renowned for their ability to produce high bite forces. These birds also possess a suite of modifications to their cranial architecture interpreted to be adaptations for feeding on mechanically resistant foods, yet the relationship between cranial morphology and diet has never been explicitly tested. Here, we provide a three-dimensional geometric morphometric analysis of the developmental and biomechanical factors that may be influencing the evolution of psittaciformes’ distinctive cranial morphologies. Results Contrary to our own predictions, we find that dietary preferences for more- or less- mechanically resistant foods have very little influence on beak and skull shape, and that diet predicts only 2.4% of the shape variation in psittaciform beaks and skulls. Conversely, evolutionary allometry and integration together predict almost half the observed shape variation, with phylogeny remaining an important factor in shape identity throughout our analyses, particularly in separating cockatoos (Cacatuoidea) from the true parrots (Psittacoidea). Conclusions Our results are similar to recent findings about the evolutionary trajectories of skull and beak shape in other avian families. We therefore propose that allometry and integration are important factors causing canalization of the avian head, and while diet clearly has an influence on beak shape between families, this may not be as important at driving evolvability within families as is commonly assumed. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1186/s12862-019-1432-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
- Published
- 2019
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32. The impact of beak tissue sloughing and beak shape variation on the behavior and welfare of infrared beak-treated layer pullets and hens
- Author
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Karen Schwean-Lardner, Susantha Gomis, Henry L. Classen, S Struthers, and Trever G. Crowe
- Subjects
040301 veterinary sciences ,Infrared Rays ,Pecking order ,Biology ,Beak shape ,Animal Welfare ,0403 veterinary science ,Eating ,Random Allocation ,Animal science ,Animals ,Cannibalism ,Animal Husbandry ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Beak ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,General Medicine ,Sham control ,Sloughing ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Aggression ,Feather ,visual_art ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Female ,Chickens - Abstract
This research examined how infrared beak treatment (IRBT), sloughing of the treated beak tissue, and the variations in beak shape that can occur post-IRBT impact the welfare and mortality of Lohmann LSL-Lite (LW) and Lohmann Brown (LB) pullets and hens. Two experiments were conducted and birds for both experiments were treated on the day of hatch. IRBT equipment settings were adjusted to create 4 specific beak shapes: shovel (SHV), step (STP), standard (STAN), and an untreated sham control (C). Experiment 1 pullets (n = 80 per strain) were reared in bioassay cages from 1 to 29 D of age (4 replicates per treatment). Data collected included time and presence of beak sloughing, pecking force, behavioral expression, and mortality. Experiment 2 pullets (n = 320 per strain) were reared in floor pens from 1 D to 18 wk of age (2 replicates per treatment) and then conventional cages from 18 to 60 wk of age (6 replicates per treatment). Data collected for Experiment 2 included behavioral expression, feather cover, comb damage, and mortality. Data were analyzed using PROC MIXED (SAS® 9.4) with Tukey's test to separate means. Differences were significant when P ≤ 0.05. IRBT and sloughing had no effect on pecking force or mortality throughout rearing. The variations in post-IRBT beak shape had minor effects on behavior. During rearing, STAN pullets were more active than C pullets but STP and STAN pullets performed less exploratory pecking. During the laying period, SHV and STP hens preened more than C hens. The IRBT treatments, regardless of beak shape, reduced feather loss, comb damage, and cannibalism-related mortality during the laying period. Overall, the results indicate that LW and LB pullets and hens can cope with the change in beak shape that occurs with IRBT, and that welfare is not negatively impacted if some variation in beak shape occurs.
- Published
- 2019
33. 2017 Spring Meeting of the WPSA UK Branch
- Author
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Widowski Tm, Brocklehurst S, Morrissey Klh, and Sandilands
- Subjects
Beak ,Pecking order ,Abrasive ,Object (grammar) ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Beak shape ,Mathematics - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Comparison of whole embryonic development in the duck (Anas platyrhynchos) and goose (Anser cygnoides) with the chicken (Gallus gallus)
- Author
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Zhe Wang, Xia Qin, Shanshan Li, Shibin Bai, Shuyi Zhang, David M. Irwin, and Junpeng Zhang
- Subjects
Anas ,Anser cygnoides ,animal structures ,Embryo, Nonmammalian ,animal diseases ,Zoology ,Embryonic Development ,Chick Embryo ,Beak shape ,03 medical and health sciences ,Goose ,biology.animal ,Geese ,Waterfowl ,Animals ,Staging system ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,biology ,Embryogenesis ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Beak ,virus diseases ,Embryonic Stage ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Hindlimb ,Ducks ,Animal Science and Zoology - Abstract
Embryos from aquatic birds are the primary models for the study of flipper development. While some staging of early embryogenesis in duck have been studied, characterization of the stages of the entire embryonic development period in water birds has not been described. This study aimed to establish a comparison of complete morphological development staging for ducks (Anas platyrhynchos) and geese (Anser cygnoides) with the embryonic staging system by Hamburger and Hamilton (HH) for the chicken (Gallus gallus). Our results show that morphological development in the chicken, duck, and goose are similar in the early stages. The major differences occurred after stage 27 of embryonic development, where the beak shape in ducks and geese was wider and longer than in chickens. In addition, the second and third interdigital webs of the hind limb of the chicken were found to be degraded from stage 31, and eventually vanished at stage 35; however, they were retained in ducks and geese. Rapid physical development occurred in the mid-to-late stages in ducks and geese. To our best knowledge, this is the first description of complete embryonic development for the duck and goose. Establishment of an embryonic staging system for duck and goose provides new models for the study of waterfowl development.
- Published
- 2018
35. The evolutionary relationship among beak shape, mechanical advantage, and feeding ecology in modern birds
- Author
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Jen A. Bright, Guillermo Navalón, Emily J. Rayfield, and Jesús Marugán-Lobón
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,animal structures ,Zoology ,Biology ,Beak shape ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Birds ,03 medical and health sciences ,Phylogenetics ,Genetics ,Animals ,Mechanical advantage ,Feeding ecology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Phylogeny ,Beak ,Phylogenetic comparative methods ,Feeding Behavior ,biology.organism_classification ,Biological Evolution ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Diet ,body regions ,030104 developmental biology ,Taxon ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Modern birds - Abstract
Extensive research on avian adaptive radiations has led to a presumption that beak morphology predicts feeding ecology in birds. However, this ecomorphological relationship has only been quantified in a handful of avian lineages, where associations are of variable strength, and never at a broad macroevolutionary scale. Here, we used shape analysis and phylogenetic comparative methods to quantify the relationships among beak shape, mechanical advantage, and two measures of feeding ecology (feeding behavior and semiquantitative dietary preferences) in a broad sample of modern birds, comprising most living orders. We found a complex relationship, with most variables showing a significant relationship with feeding ecology but little explanatory power. For example, diet accounts for less than 12% of beak shape variation. Similar beak shapes are associated with disparate dietary regimes, even when accounting for diet-feeding behavior relationships and phylogeny. Very few lineages optimize for stronger bite forces, with most birds exhibiting relatively fast, weak bites, even in large predatory taxa. The extreme morphological and behavioral flexibility of the beak in birds suggests that, far from being an exemplary feeding adaptation, avian beak diversification may have been largely contingent on trade-offs and constraints.
- Published
- 2018
36. The Relationships Between the Performance of Injurious Pecking and Behavioural and Physical Traits in Domestic Turkeys
- Author
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Dalton, Hillary Anne and Torrey, Stephanie
- Subjects
severe feather pecking ,beak shape ,lameness ,activity ,T-patterns ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,animal behaviour ,turkeys ,injurious pecking ,head pecking ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,psychological phenomena and processes ,cannibalism - Abstract
This thesis is an investigation of the relationships between the performance of injurious pecking and other behavioural and physical traits in domestic turkeys. Injurious pecking is a serious concern for the welfare and productivity of domestic turkeys, as a large proportion of the mortalities and culls in commercial flocks show injurious pecking damage. There are three distinct types of injurious pecking in turkeys: head pecking, severe feather pecking, and cannibalism; however, the development and causation of this damaging behaviour in turkeys is still poorly understood. The first research study in this thesis investigated the development of injurious pecking damage in relation to physical characteristics, such as body weight, leg health, and the snood length of growing male turkeys. This study showed that male turkeys develop more injurious pecking damage and poorer leg health over time. Yet, head pecking damage showed no correlation with body weight and snood length in domestic male turkeys. The validation study of data accelerometers for detecting turkey steps determined that this technology is best suited to evaluate the relationship between activity levels and injurious pecking in turkeys under small-scale research settings. The next study used temporal pattern analysis and a conventional behavioural assessment to identify differences in the behavioural organization of head pecking, severe feather pecking, and non-damaging gentle feather pecking. Both analyses identified similar differences in the structure of active behaviours and gentle feather pecking among pecking types, yet gave conflicting results on the organization of feeding and foraging behaviour for turkeys engaged in head, severe, or gentle feather pecking. The final study was an initial step for determining if morphological differences in beak shape influence the injurious pecking behaviour of individual turkeys. This research used landmark-based geometric morphometrics to establish that beak shape shows a wide phenotypic variation between male and female domestic turkeys at both 6 and 18.5 weeks of age. This morphological study provides a foundation for future genetics and behavioural research to evaluate the heritability of beak shape in domestic turkeys and to identify differences in potential capacity for injurious pecking damage between the distinct beak shape phenotypes. Hybrid Turkeys, Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food, Canadian Poultry Research Council, The Campbell Centre for the Study of Animal Welfare, Poultry Industry Council
- Published
- 2016
37. Can Non-Beak Treated Hens be Kept in Commercial Furnished Cages? Exploring the Effects of Strain and Extra Environmental Enrichment on Behaviour, Feather Cover, and Mortality
- Author
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Victoria Sandilands, Sarah Brocklehurst, Tina M. Widowski, Laurence Baker, and Krysta Morrissey
- Subjects
Veterinary medicine ,animal structures ,040301 veterinary sciences ,furnished cage ,laying hen ,Biology ,Beak shape ,Furnished cages ,Article ,0403 veterinary science ,Environmental enrichment ,Feather pecking ,General Veterinary ,0402 animal and dairy science ,injurious pecking ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,beak trimming ,beak treatment ,feather cover ,environmental enrichment ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Breed ,Beak ,Feather ,visual_art ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Animal Science and Zoology - Abstract
Commercial laying hens are prone to injurious pecking (IP), a common multifactorial problem. A 2 × 2 × 2 factorial design assessed the effects of breed (Lohmann Brown Classic (L) or Hyline Brown (H)), beak treatment (infra-red treated (T) or not (NT)), and environment (extra enrichment (EE) or no extra enrichment (NE)) on mortality, behaviour, feather cover, and beak shape. Hens were allocated to treatments at 16 weeks of age and data were collected every four weeks from age 19 to 71 weeks. Data were analysed in Genstat using mixed models. L hens had higher all and IP-related mortality than H hens (p < 0.003), whilst NT hens had higher mortality than T hens but only due to culling of whole cages (p < 0.001). Feather cover for L hens deteriorated more quickly with age at most body sites than H hens (age × breed × body site p < 0.001). For NT hens, feather cover was worse at most body sites (beak treatment × body site p < 0.001), and worsened more quickly with age (age × beak treatment p = 0.014) than T hens. L and NE hens performed more bird-to-bird pecking than H and EE hens, respectively (breed p = 0.015, enrichment p = 0.032). More damage to mats and ropes was caused by L and NT hens than by H and T hens, respectively (age × breed p < 0.005, beak treatment p < 0.001). Though H hens had fewer mortalities and better feather cover, breed effects may have been influenced by farm management practices, as they may have been better suited to H than L hens. Though EE hens performed less bird-to-bird pecking, the enrichments were less effective at reducing feather cover damage and mortality than expected.
- Published
- 2016
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38. Analysis of the ontogenetic variation in body and beak shape of the Illex argentinus inner shelf spawning groups by geometric morphometrics
- Author
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Enrique Morsan, Augusto César Crespi-Abril, and Pedro J. Barón
- Subjects
Morphometrics ,GEOMETRIC MORPHOMETRICS ,Fin ,biology ,Ontogeny ,Anatomy ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Beak shape ,ARGENTINEAN SHORT-FIN SQUID ,COASTAL SPAWNING GROUPS ,Ciencias Biológicas ,Beak ,ILLEX ARGENTINUS ,Otros Tópicos Biológicos ,Illex argentinus ,CIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTAS ,Shape analysis (digital geometry) - Abstract
In this paper we analysed size and shape differences of body (mantle and fins) and inferior beak of the squid Illex argentinus from two Patagonian inner-shelf spawning groups. A new method was developed to reconstruct three-dimensional coordinates based on the 2-D projection of the beak on a plane. Shape of the beak did not vary between groups, sexes and maturity condition of individuals. Also, no beak shape changes were observed through the ontogeny. In contrast, as larger and heavier squids were considered in shape analysis, body widened near the fin insertion, and fin area increased. Our results suggest that shape adaptations of I. argentinus through the ontogeny reflect modifications to optimize swimming performance rather than to increase gamete holding capacity. Fil: Crespi Abril, Augusto Cesar. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Nacional Patagónico; Argentina Fil: Morsan, Enrique Mario. Universidad Nacional del Comahue; Argentina Fil: Baron, Pedro Jose. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Nacional Patagónico; Argentina
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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39. Variation in gluten strength and yellow pigment in Ethiopian tetraploid wheat germplasm
- Author
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Faris Hailu and Arnulf Merker
- Subjects
Germplasm ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Spike density ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,Berry ,Biology ,Beak shape ,Gluten ,Pigment ,Agronomy ,chemistry ,visual_art ,Genetics ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Grain yield ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Ten released varieties and one hundred and eleven tetraploid (2n = 4x = 28, AABB) wheat accessions collected from different major wheat producing regions, consisting of totally 2904 entries were characterized for content of yellow pigment, gluten strength, thousand kernel weights, grain yield, percent of yellow berry, glumes color, awn color, seed color, beak shape and spike density. The objectives were to assess variation with respect to regions of origin, species and altitudinal classes and to study the interrelationships of the qualitative traits used for the study. The accessions and/or released varieties showed significant regional variation for all the traits used in the study, but clinal variation among altitudinal classes and species were significant (P ≤ 0.01) in 6 (60%) and 9 (90%) of the studied traits, respectively. The accessions revealed consistent variation (P ≤ 0.001) within both regions and altitudinal classes for all the traits used in the study. The sedimentation volume was positively correlated with content of yellow pigment, percent of yellow berry, thousand kernel weights, glumes color, awn color, beak shape, seed color and grain yield. The contents of yellow pigment was positively correlated with awn color, beak shape and grain yield, but negatively correlated with seed color and spike density. Generally wide variation was found in the germplasm. Particularly variation was high for the content of the yellow pigment as well as the gluten strength, which provides opportunities to be utilized for genetic improvement.
- Published
- 2007
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40. Evolution of body morphology and beak shape revealed by a morphometric analysis of 14 Paridae species
- Author
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Gang Song, Yanhua Qu, Tianlong Cai, Qing Quan, Fumin Lei, and Shimiao Shao
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Morphology ,Biodiversity ,Zoology ,Morphology (biology) ,Distribution overlap ,Biology ,Beak shape ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Phylogenetic relationship ,03 medical and health sciences ,Altitude ,Phylogenetics ,Paridae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Morphometrics ,Geometric morphometrics ,Phylogenetic tree ,Research ,biology.organism_classification ,030104 developmental biology ,Ground tit ,Animal Science and Zoology - Abstract
Background Morphological characters of birds reflect their adaptive evolution and ecological requirements and are also relevant to phylogenetic relationships within a group of related species. The tits (Paridae) are known to be outwardly homogeneous in shape, with one aberrant member, the Ground Tit (Pseudopodoces humilis), which is quite different from its relatives in both body morphology and beak shape. We combined traditional measurements and geometric morphometrics to quantify the variation in body morphology and beak shape of 14 Paridae species distributed in China. Based on these results, we sought to assess the contribution of phylogeny, altitude and species interactions to the evolution of morphological traits. Results The basic features for discriminating among the 14 species studied here were overall body size, the ratio of body and tail length to culmen and tarsus length, and beak shape (long/slender/pointy vs. short/robust/blunt). These dimensions clearly separate Ps. humilis and Melanochlora sultanea from the other species in shape space. Body length and PC3 of beak shape (round outline vs. straight outline) show significant phylogenetic signals. Across 14 species, altitude is related to tarsus, culmen length and PC1 of beak shape. Within Parus major, altitude is related to body weight, body length, culmen length and PC1 of body morphology. Morphological distances and geographic distances among species are positively correlated. Conclusions The body morphology of Paridae species shows extensive evolutionary changes, while their beak has mainly evolved along the long/slender/pointy vs. short/robust/blunt dimension. Only body length and beak curvature show a phylogenetic signal. Altitude correlates with multiple traits both across and within species, suggesting that altitude is an important factor in promoting morphological divergence. The deviant appearance of Ps. humilis corresponds to its foraging and feeding adaptations to high-altitude steppe habitats. Our results also show a higher level of morphological divergence with greater difference in distribution ranges among the Paridae species involved in this study. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12983-016-0162-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
- Published
- 2015
41. An analysis of beak shape variation in two ages of domestic turkeys (Meleagris gallopavo) using landmark-based geometric morphometrics
- Author
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Hillary A. Dalton, Michele T. Guerin, Tina M. Widowski, Stephanie Torrey, and Benjamin J. Wood
- Subjects
Male ,0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,lcsh:Medicine ,Mandible ,Beak shape ,01 natural sciences ,Poultry ,Mathematical and Statistical Techniques ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Gamefowl ,lcsh:Science ,Principal Component Analysis ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Beak ,Eukaryota ,Anatomy ,Cameras ,Phenotypes ,Optical Equipment ,Vertebrates ,Physical Sciences ,Engineering and Technology ,Female ,Statistics (Mathematics) ,Research Article ,Dorsum ,Turkeys ,animal structures ,Imaging Techniques ,Equipment ,Research and Analysis Methods ,010603 evolutionary biology ,Birds ,03 medical and health sciences ,Age groups ,Genetics ,Animals ,Statistical Methods ,Morphometrics ,Mouth ,Morphometry ,lcsh:R ,Organisms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,body regions ,Sexual dimorphism ,030104 developmental biology ,Fowl ,Age Groups ,Amniotes ,Multivariate Analysis ,People and Places ,Population Groupings ,lcsh:Q ,Digestive System ,Head ,Meleagris gallopavo ,Mathematics - Abstract
The objective of this study was to assess beak shape variation in domestic turkeys (Meleagris gallopavo) and determine the effects of age, sex, and beak size on beak shape variation using geometric morphometrics. Dorsal and right lateral images were taken of 2442 turkeys at 6 and 18.5 weeks of age. Landmarks were digitized in tpsDig in three analyses of the dorsal upper mandible, lateral upper mandible, and lateral lower mandible shape of each turkey at both ages. The coordinate data were then subjected to a principal components analysis (PCA), multivariate regression, and a canonical variates analysis (CVA) with a Procrustes ANOVA in MorphoJ. For the dorsal images, three principal components (PCs) showed beak shape variation ranged from long, narrow, and pointed to short, wide, and blunt upper mandibles at both ages (6 weeks: 95.36%, 18.5 weeks: 92.21%). Three PCs showed the lateral upper mandible shape variation ranged from long, wide beaks with long, curved beak tips to short, narrow beaks with short, pointed beak tips at both ages (6 weeks: 94.91%, 18.5 weeks: 94.33%). Three PCs also explained 97.80% (6 weeks) and 97.11% (18.5 weeks) of the lateral lower mandible shape variation ranging from wide and round to narrow and thin lower mandibles with superior/inferior beak tip shifts. Beak size accounted for varying proportions of the beak shape variation (0.96–54.76%; P < 0.0001) in the three analyses of each age group. For all the analyses, the CVA showed sexual dimorphism in beak shape (P < 0.0001) with female upper mandibles appearing wider and blunter dorsally with long, curved beak tips laterally. Whereas male turkey upper mandibles had a narrow, pointed dorsal appearance and short, pointed beak tips laterally. Future applications of beak shape variability could have a genetic and welfare value by incorporating beak shape variation to select for specific turkey beak phenotypes as an alternative to beak treatment.
- Published
- 2017
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42. Shared developmental programme strongly constrains beak shape diversity in songbirds
- Author
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Joerg A. Fritz, Masayoshi Tokita, Michael Brenner, M. Brent Hawkins, Kevin J. Burns, Arhat Abzhanov, and Joseph Brancale
- Subjects
animal structures ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Biology ,Beak shape ,Models, Biological ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Morphogenesis ,Animals ,Body Weights and Measures ,Computer Simulation ,Selection, Genetic ,Zebra finch ,Phylogeny ,Cell Proliferation ,Multidisciplinary ,Natural selection ,Ecology ,Beak ,General Chemistry ,body regions ,Variation (linguistics) ,Morphometric analysis ,Evolutionary biology ,Finches ,Diversity (business) - Abstract
The striking diversity of bird beak shapes is an outcome of natural selection, yet the relative importance of the limitations imposed by the process of beak development on generating such variation is unclear. Untangling these factors requires mapping developmental mechanisms over a phylogeny far exceeding model systems studied thus far. We address this issue with a comparative morphometric analysis of beak shape in a diverse group of songbirds. Here we show that the dynamics of the proliferative growth zone must follow restrictive rules to explain the observed variation, with beak diversity constrained to a three parameter family of shapes, parameterized by length, depth and the degree of shear. We experimentally verify these predictions by analysing cell proliferation in the developing embryonic beaks of the zebra finch. Our findings indicate that beak shape variability in many songbirds is strongly constrained by shared properties of the developmental programme controlling the growth zone.
- Published
- 2013
43. Evaluation of coronoid process morphology in gender determination using orthopantomograms in western part of Maharashtra
- Author
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KA Kamala, Girish Suragimath, Abhijeet Sande, Ajay Nayak, and SR Ashwinirani
- Subjects
Orthodontics ,Coronoid process ,education.field_of_study ,Geography ,Morphology (linguistics) ,Mechanics of Materials ,Mechanical Engineering ,Population ,Metals and Alloys ,Statistical analysis ,Beak shape ,education - Abstract
Objective of the Study: To evaluate the morphological variations of the coronoid process using Orthopantomograms in the western part of Maharashtra population. Materials and Methods: The study was carried out using 300 orthopantomograms (OPGs) comprised of both gender, the different shapes of the coronoid process were traced on both the right and left sides. The data obtained were subjected to statistical analysis. Results: The most common shape of the coronoid process was observed to be triangular followed by beak shape, round shape and flat shape. Conclusion: Based on the present study in western population of Maharashtra, triangular shape of coronoid process was most common in males and females.
- Published
- 2017
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44. Beak and skull shapes of human commensal and non-commensal house sparrows Passer domesticus
- Author
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Mansour Aliabadian, Glenn-Peter Sætre, Øyvind Hammer, Antonio Sánchez, Tayebeh Arbabi, Sepand Riyahi, and C.S. Roselaar
- Subjects
Beak shape ,Granivorous bird ,Zoology ,Iran ,Biology ,Subspecies ,biology.animal ,Passer domesticus ,Animals ,Ecosystem ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Morphometrics ,Geometric morphometrics ,Sparrow ,Ecology ,Skull ,Beak ,Agriculture ,Commensalism ,biology.organism_classification ,Adaptation, Physiological ,Diet ,Seeds ,Human commensalism ,Allometry ,Heterochrony ,Passer ,Sparrows ,Research Article - Abstract
Background The granivorous house sparrow Passer domesticus is thought to have developed its commensal relationship with humans with the rise of agriculture in the Middle East some 10,000 years ago, and to have expanded with the spread of agriculture in Eurasia during the last few thousand years. One subspecies, P. d. bactrianus, residing in Central Asia, has apparently maintained the ancestral ecology, however. This subspecies is not associated with human settlements; it is migratory and lives in natural grass- and wetland habitats feeding on wild grass seeds. It is well documented that the agricultural revolution was associated with an increase in grain size and changes in seed structure in cultivated cereals, the preferred food source of commensal house sparrow. Accordingly, we hypothesize that correlated changes may have occurred in beak and skull morphology as adaptive responses to the change in diet. Here, we test this hypothesis by comparing the skull shapes of 101 house sparrows from Iran, belonging to five different subspecies, including the non-commensal P. d. bactrianus, using geometric morphometrics. Results The various commensal house sparrow subspecies share subtle but consistent skeletal features that differ significantly from those of the non-commensal P. d. bactrianus. Although there is a marked overall size allometry in the data set, the shape difference between the ecologically differentiated sparrows cannot be explained by differences in size alone. Relative to the size allometry commensal house sparrows exhibit a skull shape consistent with accelerated development (heterochrony), resulting in a more robust facial cranium and a larger, more pointed beak. Conclusion The difference in skull shape and robustness of the beak between commensal and non-commensal house sparrows is consistent with adaptations to process the larger and rachis encapsulated seeds of domesticated cereals among human associated populations.
- Published
- 2013
45. Exploring possible human influences on the evolution of darwin's finches
- Author
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Fernando De Leon, Luis, Raeymaekers, Joost, Bermingham, Eldredge, Podos, Jeffrey, Herrel, Anthony, and Hendry, Andrew P
- Subjects
conservation biology ,diversification ,human impact ,isla daphne major ,galapagos ground finches ,cichlid fish ,galapagos ,external morphology ,beak shape ,ecological speciation ,bite force ,contemporary evolution ,adaptive radiation ,sympatric morphs ,natural-selection - Abstract
Humans are an increasingly common influence on the evolution of natural populations. Potential arenas of influence include altered evolutionary trajectories within populations and modifications of the process of divergence among populations. We consider this second arena in the medium ground finch (Geospiza fortis) on Santa Cruz Island, Galapagos, Ecuador. Our study compared the G. fortis population at a relatively undisturbed site, El Garrapatero, to the population at a severely disturbed site, Academy Bay, which is immediately adjacent to the town of Puerto Ayora. The El Garrapatero population currently shows beak size bimodality that is tied to assortative mating and disruptive selection, whereas the Academy Bay population was historically bimodal but has lost this property in conjunction with a dramatic increase in local human population density. We here evaluate potential ecological-adaptive drivers of the differences in modality by quantifying relationships between morphology (beak and head dimensions), functional performance (bite force), and environmental characteristics (diet). Our main finding is that associations among these variables are generally weaker at Academy Bay than at El Garrapatero, possibly because novel foods are used at the former site irrespective of individual morphology and performance. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the rugged adaptive landscapes promoting and maintaining diversification in nature can be smoothed by human activities, thus hindering ongoing adaptive radiation. ispartof: Evolution vol:65 issue:8 pages:2258-2272 ispartof: location:United States status: published
- Published
- 2011
46. The role of beak shape in octopodid taxonomy
- Author
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John P. Thorpe, Rob Ogden, Phillip C. Watts, and A. L. Allcock
- Subjects
body regions ,Mahalanobis distance ,animal structures ,Beak ,Discriminant function analysis ,Dendrogram ,Principal component analysis ,Genetic data ,Zoology ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,Beak shape - Abstract
Beak shapes in nine species of Southern Ocean octopodids were measured using seven size-standardized ratios. The results were analysed using principal component analysis and discriminant function analysis and show that beak shape may be used as a taxonomic character to distinguish between genera, but not between species. Stepwise discriminant function analysis indicated that all seven ratios were required to maximize discrimination between beaks. A phenogram constructed from a matrix of Mahalanobis distances differed from a dendrogram produced from genetic data. This suggests that, although useful for discrimination, beak morphology is probably not suitable for constructing phylogenies.
- Published
- 2011
47. Ontogeny of the cranial skeleton in a Darwin's finch (Geospiza fortis)
- Author
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Genbrugge, Annelies, Heyde, Anne-Sophie, Adriaens, Dominique, Boone, Matthieu, Van Hoorebeke, Luc, Dirckx, Joris, Aerts, Peter, Podos, Jeffrey, and Herrel, Anthony
- Subjects
SELECTION ,animal structures ,PHYLOGENY ,GALAPAGOS ,Biology and Life Sciences ,EVOLUTION ,ontogeny ,Darwin’s finches ,PATTERNS ,MORPHOLOGY ,cranial morphology ,GROUND FINCHES ,BEAK SHAPE ,POPULATION - Abstract
Darwin's finches are a model system in ecological and evolutionary research, but surprisingly little is known about their skull morphology and development. Indeed, only the early beak development and external variation in adult beak shape has been studied. Understanding the development of the skull from embryo up to the adult is important to gain insights into how selection acts upon, and drives, variation in beak shape. Here, we provide a detailed description of the skeletal development of the skull in the medium ground finch (Geospiza fortis). Although the ossification sequence of the cranial elements is broadly similar to that observed for other birds, some differences can be observed. Unexpectedly, our data show that large changes in skull shape take place between the nestling and the juvenile phases. The reorientation of the beak, the orbit and the formation of well-developed processes and cristae suggest that these changes are likely related to the use of the beak after leaving the nest. This suggests that the active use of the jaw muscles during seed cracking plays an important role in shaping the adult skull morphology and may be driving some of the intra-specific variation observed in species such as G. fortis. Investigating the development of the jaw muscles and their interaction with the observed ossification and formation of the skull and lower jaw would allow further insights into the ecology and evolution of beak morphology in Darwin's finches.
- Published
- 2011
48. Phenotypic and seed protein analysis in 31 Lima bean (Phaseolus lunatus) accessions in Ghana
- Author
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AG Carson, SK Offei, IK Asante, and R Addy
- Subjects
Coat ,Horticulture ,Ecology ,biology ,Botany ,food and beverages ,Phaseolus ,biology.organism_classification ,Beak shape ,Phenotype ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Seed protein ,West africa - Abstract
Phenotypic and seed protein analyses were performed on 31 accessions of Lima bean assembled in Ghana. Data on 16 phenotypic characters consisting of eight quantitative and eight qualitative were analysed. There were significant differences among the accessions based on the eight quantitative characters. Seed protein analysis showed 17 bands with relative mobility of bands, which ranged from 0.01 to 0.86. An ordinal logistic regression analysis showed significant evidence for seed coat, pod beak shape and seed size association. Cluster analysis based on both phenotypic and protein data provided evidence for differences among the accessions. Quantitative characters were associated with some specific clusters.
- Published
- 2009
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49. The cells that fill the bill: neural crest and the evolution of craniofacial development
- Author
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Richard A. Schneider and Andrew H. Jheon
- Subjects
animal structures ,Extramural ,Neural crest ,Vertebrate ,Zoology ,Biology ,Beak shape ,Birds ,Mesoderm ,Critical Reviews in Oral Biology & Medicine ,Evolutionary biology ,Neural Crest ,Osteogenesis ,biology.animal ,Models, Animal ,%22">Fish ,Animals ,Humans ,Craniofacial skeleton ,Craniofacial ,Maxillofacial Development ,General Dentistry - Abstract
Avian embryos, which have been studied scientifically since Aristotle, continue to persevere as invaluable research tools, especially for our understanding of the development and evolution of the craniofacial skeleton. Whether the topic is beak shape in Darwin’s finches or signaling interactions that underlie bone and tooth formation, birds offer advantages for craniofacial biology that uniquely complement the strengths of other vertebrate model systems, such as fish, frogs, and mice. Several papers published during the past few years have helped pinpoint molecular and cellular mechanisms that pattern the face and jaws through experiments that could only have been done together with our feathered friends. Ultimately, such knowledge will be essential for devising novel clinical approaches to treat and/or prevent diseases, injuries, and birth defects that affect the human craniofacial skeleton. Here we review recent insights plucked from avians on key developmental processes that generate craniofacial diversity.
- Published
- 2009
50. Molecular Shaping of the Beak
- Author
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Ping Wu, Sanong Suksaweang, Randall B. Widelitz, Ting-Xin Jiang, and Cheng-Ming Chuong
- Subjects
body regions ,Multidisciplinary ,Beak ,animal structures ,Carrier protein ,embryonic structures ,Zoology ,Anatomy ,Biology ,Beak shape ,Article - Abstract
Beak shape is a classic example of evolutionary diversification. Beak development in chicken and duck was used to examine morphological variations among avian species. There is only one proliferative zone in the frontonasal mass of chickens, but two in ducks. These growth zones are associated with bone morphogenetic protein 4 (BMP4) activity. By “tinkering” with BMP4 in beak prominences, the shapes of the chicken beak can be modulated.
- Published
- 2004
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