Scientific Reports (Jan 2024)

Escape behaviors in prey and the evolution of pennaceous plumage in dinosaurs

  • Jinseok Park,
  • Minyoung Son,
  • Jeongyeol Park,
  • Sang Yun Bang,
  • Jungmoon Ha,
  • Hyungpil Moon,
  • Yuong-Nam Lee,
  • Sang-im Lee,
  • Piotr G. Jablonski

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-50225-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 20

Abstract

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Abstract Numerous non-avian dinosaurs possessed pennaceous feathers on their forelimbs (proto-wings) and tail. Their functions remain unclear. We propose that these pennaceous feathers were used in displays to flush hiding prey through stimulation of sensory-neural escape pathways in prey, allowing the dinosaurs to pursue the flushed prey. We evaluated the escape behavior of grasshoppers to hypothetical visual flush-displays by a robotic dinosaur, and we recorded neurophysiological responses of grasshoppers’ escape pathway to computer animations of the hypothetical flush-displays by dinosaurs. We show that the prey of dinosaurs would have fled more often when proto-wings were present, especially distally and with contrasting patterns, and when caudal plumage, especially of a large area, was used during the hypothetical flush-displays. The reinforcing loop between flush and pursue functions could have contributed to the evolution of larger and stiffer feathers for faster running, maneuverability, and stronger flush-displays, promoting foraging based on the flush-pursue strategy. The flush-pursue hypothesis can explain the presence and distribution of the pennaceous feathers, plumage color contrasts, as well as a number of other features observed in early pennaraptorans. This scenario highlights that sensory-neural processes underlying prey’s antipredatory reactions may contribute to the origin of major evolutionary innovations in predators.