Waimanu manningeri, Chris Gaskin
Losing power of flight no impact on penguins’ brains
Researchers have reconstructed the brain of the world’s oldest-known penguin which lived in Waipara, North Canterbury 60
million years ago.
Sophisticated medical imaging software was used to scan the fossil skull of the ancient penguin, found in 2003 and now
in Canterbury Museum’s collections, to investigate how losing the power of flight impacted on the anatomy of its brain.
Researchers from the University of Texas and Canterbury Museum had thought that losing the ability to fly would change
the brain structure of ancient penguins, making their brains more like their modern relatives. Instead the researchers
found that the structure of penguins’ brains did not change until millions and millions of years after the species lost
the power of flight.
Similarities in the brain shape of the ancient species and modern diving birds, such as loons, petrels, and tropicbirds,
suggest that the act of diving could be responsible for the differences in brain structure.
“What this seems to indicate is that becoming larger, losing flight and becoming a wing-propelled diver does not
necessarily change the [brain] anatomy quickly,” says James Proffitt, a graduate student at the University of Texas’s
Jackson School of Geosciences who led the research.
The shape of bird skulls is influenced by the structure of the brain. To learn about early penguin brain anatomy, the
researchers used X-ray CT-scanning to digitally capture fine features of the skull’s anatomy. Computer modeling software
was then used to create a digital mould of the brain. The researchers found no similarities with the brain anatomy of
today’s penguins.
“It’s difficult to know why modern penguins’ brains look different to their ancestors’ brains. It’s possible that
millions of years of flightless living created gradual changes in the brain structure. But the analysis shows that these
changes are not directly related to initial loss of flight because they are not shared by the ancient penguin brain.
Proffitt conducted the research with Julia Clarke, a professor in the Jackson School’s Department of Geological
Sciences, and Dr Paul Scofield Senior Curator Natural History at Canterbury Museum. The fossilized skull of the ancient
penguin (Waimanu manneringi) was found by local fossil collector Al Mannering.
The research recently published in Journal of Anatomy was funded by a grant from the USA National Science Foundation.
ENDS