PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Sex of early birds suggests dinosaur reproductive style

International team of paleontologists discovers way to identify gender of ancient avian species

2013-01-22
(Press-News.org) In a paper published in Nature Communications on January 22, 2013, a team of paleontologists including Dr. Luis Chiappe, Director of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County's (NHM) Dinosaur Institute, has discovered a way to determine the sex of an avian dinosaur species.

Confuciusornis sanctus, a 125-million-year-old Mesozoic bird, had remarkable differences in plumage — some had long, almost body length ornamental tail feathers, others had none — features that have been interpreted as the earliest example of avian courtship. However, the idea that male Confuciusornis birds had ornamental plumage, and females did not, has not been proven until now. Chiappe and the team studied hundreds of Confuciusornis fossils unearthed from rocks deposited at the bottom of ancient lakes in what is today northeastern China and found undisputed evidence of the gender difference: medullary bone.

Chiappe conducted the study with Anusuya Chinsamy of the Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cape Town, South Africa; Jesús Marugán-Lobón of Madrid's Universidad Autonóma, Cantoblanco; Gao Chunling and Zhang Fengjiao of the Dalian Natural History Museum in China.

"Our discovery provides the first case of sex identification in an ancient bird, an animal closely related to dinosaurs, such as the famous Velociraptor," said Chiappe. "When people visit dinosaur exhibits, they often want to know if the skeletons are male or female. We have nicknames like Thomas and Sue, but of all the thousands of skeletons of dinosaurs or early birds found around the world, only the sex of a few has been determined."

According to Chinsamy, the bone histologist on the team, "Just like modern hens, female Confuciusornis birds that lived 125 million years ago deposited this special bone inside their long bones, and then used it to make the calcium-rich eggshells." Finding such tissue — present during a short period of time in reproductively active females — in a specimen that lacked long feathers proved that those birds without ornamental plumage are females.

"This now permits us to assess gender differences in growth and development of this Mesozoic bird," she said.

But while this discovery offers evidence that both early and modern female avian species were essentially using the same physiological strategy to reproduce, it also spotlights an important difference in when they sexually matured.

"In human terms, knowing the sex of these specimens sheds light on when these early birds begin puberty," said Chiappe, "Now we know that early birds began reproducing way before they were full grown, a pattern that contrasts with what we know of living birds, which typically begin reproducing after they reach full body size." In that way, ancient birds produced offspring like dinosaurs, which also began to reproduce before they were fully grown.

The specimens, housed at the Dalian Natural History Museum in northeastern China, had been excavated from rocks formed at the bottom of ancient lakes in a forested environment surrounded by volcanoes. Ancient catastrophes, presumably related to volcanic eruptions, killed large numbers of birds and other animals, whose bodies were buried deep in the lake mud that helped minimize decay and preserving the organs, skeletons, and plumage. "This discovery is part of the big picture of understanding the early evolution of birds,'' Chiappe said, "and how living birds became what they are."

### The Dinosaur Institute The Dinosaur Institute was founded in 2005 with a mission to make the Natural History Museum the dinosaur hub of the West Coast. Housed within the Museum, it conducts national and international research on dinosaurs and other animals that lived with them during the Mesozoic Era. It also manages an aggressive field program aimed to substantially increase the Museum's holdings of these fossils.

About NHM NHM is at 900 Exposition Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90007. Open seven days a week 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m. For more information, call (213) 763-DINO or visit www.nhm.org.

Visit NHM on Facebook at: www.facebook.com/nhmla Follow NHM on Twitter at: www.twitter.com/nhmla


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

The skin aging regulator

The skin aging regulator
2013-01-22
These mechanisms, described in vivo in mice, engage molecule CD98hc, which is involved in epidermis renewal and could be an indicator of the skin's capacity for regeneration. The results were published in the Journal of Experimental Medicine review. The epidermis, the surface layer of the skin, is mainly composed of keratinocytes cells, which, in humans, are renewed continuously over a 21-day cycle. These cells are located on a membrane made up of components from the extracellular matrix that provides the junction with the dermis, the deep layer of the skin (see diagram). ...

Harmful effects of bisphenol A proved experimentally

2013-01-22
Bisphenol A (BPA) is a chemical compound that is included in the composition of plastics and resins. It is used, for example, in the manufacture of food containers such as bottles and babies' feeding bottles. It is also found in the protective films used inside food and drink cans and on till receipts where it used as a discloser. Significant levels of BPA have also been found in human blood, urine, amniotic fluid and placentas. Recent studies have shown that this industrial component has harmful effects on reproductive ability, development and the metabolism of laboratory ...

Analysis of fracking wastewater yields some surprises

2013-01-22
DURHAM, N.C. -- Hydraulically fractured natural gas wells are producing less wastewater per unit of gas recovered than conventional wells would. But the scale of fracking operations in the Marcellus shale region is so vast that the wastewater it produces threatens to overwhelm the region's wastewater disposal capacity, according to new analysis by researchers at Duke and Kent State universities. Hydraulically fractured natural gas wells in the Marcellus shale region of Pennsylvania produce only about 35 percent as much wastewater per unit of gas recovered as conventional ...

EARTH: The dangers of solar storms

2013-01-22
Alexandria, VA – Throughout history, humanity has steadily increased its dependence upon technology. Although technology has vastly improved the quality of life for billions of people, it has also opened us up to new risks and vulnerabilities. Terrorism and natural disasters might be at the forefront of the minds of policymakers and the U.S. population, but a significant threat lurks over our heads: the sun. A massive solar storm, the size last seen a century and a half ago, could easily leave hundreds of millions of people in the dark for days, weeks or even months. The ...

Unprecedented glacier melting in the Andes blamed on climate change

2013-01-22
Glaciers in the tropical Andes have been retreating at increasing rate since the 1970s, scientists write in the most comprehensive review to date of Andean glacier observations. The researchers blame the melting on rising temperatures as the region has warmed about 0.7°C over the past 50 years (1950-1994). This unprecedented retreat could affect water supply to Andean populations in the near future. These conclusions are published today in The Cryosphere, an Open Access journal of the European Geosciences Union (EGU). The international team of scientists – uniting researchers ...

How can evolutionary biology explain why we get cancer?

2013-01-22
Over 500 billion cells in our bodies will be replaced daily, yet natural selection has enabled us to develop defenses against the cellular mutations which could cause cancer. It is this relationship between evolution and the body's fight against cancer which is explored in a new special issue of the Open Access journal Evolutionary Applications. "Cancer is far from a single well-defined disease which we can identify and eradicate," said Dr Athena Aktipis, Director, Human and Social Evolution, Center for Evolution and Cancer at the University of California, San Francisco. ...

Children with egg allergies can safely receive flu vaccine, U-M study says

2013-01-22
Ann Arbor, Mich. — Egg allergic children, including those with a history of anaphylaxis to egg, can safely receive a single dose of the seasonal influenza vaccine, according to a new study from the University of Michigan. Historically, the CDC recommended that the seasonal influenza vaccine not be administered to egg allergic children. Recent research conducted at the University of Michigan, and elsewhere, helped modify this recommendation in 2011 so that caution was warranted for only those with severe egg allergy. The new study, published in the Annals of Allergy, ...

Hypertension during pregnancy increases risk of end-stage renal disease

2013-01-22
Women with hypertensive disorders in pregnancy are at higher risk of chronic kidney disease and end-stage renal disease compared with women without the disorders, according to a study in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal). "We found that women with hypertensive disorders during pregnancy were at higher risk of end-stage renal disease than women without complicated pregnancies," writes Dr. I-Kuan Wang, Division of Nephrology, China Medical University Hospital, Taichung, Taiwan, with coauthors. Hypertensive disorders such as gestational hypertension and preeclampsia ...

Antibacterial agent used in common soaps found in increasing amounts in freshwater lakes

Antibacterial agent used in common soaps found in increasing amounts in freshwater lakes
2013-01-22
When people wash their hands with antibacterial soap, most don't think about where the chemicals contained in that soap end up. University of Minnesota engineering researchers do. A new University of Minnesota study determined that the common antibacterial agent, called triclosan, used in soaps and many other products is found in increasing amounts in several Minnesota freshwater lakes. The findings are directly linked to increased triclosan use over the past few decades. In addition, the researchers found an increasing amount of other chemical compounds, called chlorinated ...

Paradise found for Latin America's largest land mammal

Paradise found for Latin Americas largest land mammal
2013-01-22
NEW YORK (January 22, 2012) —Wildlife Conservation Society scientists have documented a thriving population of lowland tapirs – the strange forest and grassland-dwelling herbivore with the trunk-like snout – living in a network of remote national parks spanning the Peru-Bolivia border. Using a combination of camera traps, along with interviews with park guards and subsistence hunters, WCS estimates at least 14,500 lowland tapirs in the region. The population bridges five connected national parks in northwest Bolivia and southeastern Peru. The WCS findings were described ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Archaeologists use AI to create prehistoric video game

Mitochondria migrate toward the cell membrane in response to high glucose levels

Tiny viral switch offers hope against drug-resistant bacteria

Most parents aware of early peanut introduction guidelines, but confused about details

HPV vaccine can protect against severe lesions of the vulva and vagina

Virtual care provision and emergency department use among children and youth

Quadrivalent HPV vaccine and high-grade vulvovaginal lesions

Insights into dry eyes gained from stem cell-derived tear glands 

Researchers identify 166 human pluripotent stem cell lines available for use in clinical applications

Europa Clipper instrument uniquely observed interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS

UN University Report challenges climate change as sole trigger of Syrian Civil War, exposing governance failures in drought response

Real estate investment trust (REIT) acquisition associated with hospital closure and bankruptcy

New Raman imaging system detects subtle tumor signals

Boston Children’s receives a $7.5 million grant from Aligning Research to Impact Autism (ARIA) to provide clinical research coordination for the IMPACT Network

Spray-on antibacterial coating offers new protection for plants against disease and drought

ESMT Berlin study: What makes a first offer successful in negotiations

Groundbreaking ceremony marks the beginning of CTAO-South Array construction in Chile

Why swearing makes you stronger

What prevents more cancer patients from enrolling in potentially life-saving clinical trials?

UK’s worst-case climate risks laid bare for lawmakers

A decline in churchgoing linked to more deaths of despair

TAMEST announces Maralice Conacci-Sorrell, Ph.D., UT Southwestern Medical Center, as 2026 Mary Beth Maddox Award & Lectureship Recipient

Global study to evaluate whether dengue outbreaks can be anticipated earlier

Chonnam National University researchers propose innovative voltage-loop control for power factor correction

Accelerating next-generation drug discovery with click-based construction of PROTACs

Detecting the hidden magnetism of altermagnets

$7M gift supports health research, engineering and athletics at UT San Antonio

NU-9 halts Alzheimer’s disease in animal model before symptoms begin

Hospitals acquired by real estate investment trusts associated with greater risk of bankruptcy, closure

City of Hope scientists study rare disorder to uncover mechanism and hormone regulation underlying fatty liver disease and sweet aversion

[Press-News.org] Sex of early birds suggests dinosaur reproductive style
International team of paleontologists discovers way to identify gender of ancient avian species