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Rods and cones in an enantiornithine bird eye from the Early Cretaceous Jehol Biota.

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posted on 2018-05-14, 11:12 authored by Gengo Tanaka, Baochun Zhou, Yunfei Zhang, David J. Siveter, Andrew R. Parker
Extant birds have an extensive spectral range of colour vision among vertebrates, but evidence of colour vision among extinct birds has hitherto been lacking. An exceptionally well-preserved extinct enantiornithine fossil bird from the Early Cretaceous Jiufotang Formation (120 Ma) of Liaoning, China, provides the first report of mineralised soft tissue of a bird eye. Cone cells are identified, which have preserved oil droplets falling between wide ranges of size that can be compared with an extant house sparrow. The size distribution of oil droplets of extant birds demonstrates good correlation between size and the detectable wavelength range of the cone cells: UV-sensitive cones contain the smallest oil droplets, while red-sensitive cones possess the largest. The data suggests that this Early Cretaceous bird could have possessed colour vision.

History

Citation

Heliyon, 2017, 3 (12), pp. e00479

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/School of Geography, Geology and the Environment/Dept of Geology Pre Nov 17

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Heliyon

Publisher

Elsevier

issn

2405-8440

Acceptance date

2017-11-29

Copyright date

2017

Available date

2018-05-14

Publisher version

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844017308587?via=ihub#!

Language

en

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