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Ancient birds may have lost teeth to get airborne
London: In a new research, scientists have suggested that ancient birds lost their teeth in order to shed some weight to get airborne.
Archaeopteryx, at 150 million years old still the oldest known bird, had an imposing set of teeth. But within 20 million years, at least some birds were toothless.
Now, according to a report in New Scientist, a team led by Zhonghe Zhou at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing says that they know the reason behind this phenomenon.
They discovered Zhongjianornis yangi, a toothless bird from 22 million years ago in China's Liaoning province.
Their analysis shows that Z. yangi belonged to one of four bird groups that independently lost their teeth, implying that this loss was no evolutionary fluke.
Z. yangi's group is the most primitive among them, suggesting it could provide clues as to why tooth loss occurred.
The team compared the body structure of a number of early birds and found that some toothed species were more adapted for flight.
They think natural selection may have put pressure on weaker fliers to lose their teeth in a bid to improve their skills by losing excess weight.
"It would be especially advantageous to reduce the weight of the head because (it) is further from the centre of gravity," they said.
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