跳转至内容
Merck
CN

Dinosaur origin of egg color: oviraptors laid blue-green eggs.

PeerJ (2017-09-07)
Jasmina Wiemann, Tzu-Ruei Yang, Philipp N Sander, Marion Schneider, Marianne Engeser, Stephanie Kath-Schorr, Christa E Müller, P Martin Sander
摘要

Protoporphyrin (PP) and biliverdin (BV) give rise to the enormous diversity in avian egg coloration. Egg color serves several ecological purposes, including post-mating signaling and camouflage. Egg camouflage represents a major character of open-nesting birds which accomplish protection of their unhatched offspring against visually oriented predators by cryptic egg coloration. Cryptic coloration evolved to match the predominant shades of color found in the nesting environment. Such a selection pressure for the evolution of colored or cryptic eggs should be present in all open nesting birds and relatives. Many birds are open-nesting, but protect their eggs by continuous brooding, and thus exhibit no or minimal eggshell pigmentation. Their closest extant relatives, crocodiles, protect their eggs by burial and have unpigmented eggs. This phylogenetic pattern led to the assumption that colored eggs evolved within crown birds. The mosaic evolution of supposedly avian traits in non-avian theropod dinosaurs, however, such as the supposed evolution of partially open nesting behavior in oviraptorids, argues against this long-established theory. Using a double-checking liquid chromatography ESI-Q-TOF mass spectrometry routine, we traced the origin of colored eggs to their non-avian dinosaur ancestors by providing the first record of the avian eggshell pigments protoporphyrin and biliverdin in the eggshells of Late Cretaceous oviraptorid dinosaurs. The eggshell parataxon

材料
产品编号
品牌
产品描述

Sigma-Aldrich
原卟啉 IX, ≥95%
Sigma-Aldrich
恩波吡维铵 双羟萘酸盐 水合物, ≥98% (HPLC)