Xiaodong Rao, Canchao Yang, Laikun Ma, Jianwei Zhang, Wei Liang, Anders Pape Møller. 2018: Comparison of head size and bite force in two sister species of parrotbills. Avian Research, 9(1): 11. DOI: 10.1186/s40657-018-0103-z
Citation: Xiaodong Rao, Canchao Yang, Laikun Ma, Jianwei Zhang, Wei Liang, Anders Pape Møller. 2018: Comparison of head size and bite force in two sister species of parrotbills. Avian Research, 9(1): 11. DOI: 10.1186/s40657-018-0103-z

Comparison of head size and bite force in two sister species of parrotbills

  • Background Brain size is associated with morphological evolution and behavioral flexibility because animals with large brain size tend to utilize new resources and colonize novel environments more successfully. Therefore, animals with larger brain size should possess larger distribution ranges. Brain size is strongly positively correlated with head size in birds, but also with prey size and vocalizations, because individuals with large heads eat large food items and produce high frequency calls.
    Methods To test if there exists an association between head morphology and bite performance, we compared head size and bite force in two sympatric sister species of parrotbills, Ashy-throated Parrotbill (Paradoxornis alphonsianus) and Vinous-throated Parrotbill (P. webbianus), which both originated from the Himalayan area, but differ significantly in their distribution ranges.
    Results In Guizhou, southwestern China, the Ashy-throated Parrotbill with a restricted distribution range had smaller heads whilst the Vinous-throated Parrotbill with a large distribution range had larger heads. However, there were no differences in head size between Ashy-throated Parrotbills and allopatric populations of Vinous-throated Parrotbills (Jiangxi and Hebei). Furthermore, the tendency of variation in bite force was opposite to that in head size with populations with larger head size having weaker bite force.
    Conclusions We showed that there are no differences in head size between the Ashy-throated Parrotbill and allopatric populations of Vinous-throated Parrotbill, which provides evidence for the hypothesis that differences in head size in the Guizhou populations of two sister species are probably the result of local adaptation rather than species-specific. Our study has implications for avian dispersal and adaption related to head size such as diet ecology and vocalizations.
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