Identification of avian flapping motion from non-volant winged dinosaurs based on modal effective mass analysis.
Yaser Saffar TaloriJing-Shan ZhaoYun-Fei LiuWen-Xiu LuZhi-Heng LiJingmai Kathleen O'ConnorPublished in: PLoS computational biology (2019)
The origin of avian flight is one of the most controversial debates in Paleontology. This paper investigates the wing performance of Caudipteryx, the most basal non-volant dinosaur with pennaceous feathered forelimbs by using modal effective mass theory. From a mechanical standpoint, the forced vibrations excited by hindlimb locomotion stimulate the movement of wings, creating a flapping-like motion in response. This shows that the origin of the avian flight stroke should lie in a completely natural process of active locomotion on the ground. In this regard, flapping in the history of evolution of avian flight should have already occurred when the dinosaurs were equipped with pennaceous remiges and rectrices. The forced vibrations provided the initial training for flapping the feathered wings of theropods similar to Caudipteryx.