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Detecting pigments from colourful eggshells of extinct birds

Authors :
Patricia L. R. Brennan
Mark E. Hauber
Phillip Cassey
Phil F. Battley
David J. Palmer
Tomáš Grim
B. J. Gill
Suzanne M. Bassett
David R. Greenwood
Branislav Igic
Source :
Chemoecology. 20:43-48
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2009.

Abstract

The known chemical basis of diverse avian eggshell coloration is generated by the same two classes of tetrapyrrole pigments in most living birds. We aimed to extend the evolutionary scope of these patterns by detecting pigments from extinct birds’ eggs. In our samples biliverdin was successfully extracted from subfossil shell fragments of the blue-green egg-laying upland moa Megalapteryx didinus, while protoporphyrin was extracted from the beige eggs of two other extinct moa species. Our data on pigment detection from eggshells of other extant paleognath birds, together with published information on other modern lineages, confirm tetrapyrroles as ubiquitous and conserved pigments contributing to diverse eggshell colours throughout avian evolution.

Details

ISSN :
14230445 and 09377409
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chemoecology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........9598fef173304b08b0b583f6d17640f1