TY - JOUR
T1 - Possible link between brain size and flight mode in birds
T2 - Does soaring ease the energetic limitation of the brain?
AU - Shiomi, Kozue
N1 - Funding Information:
I am grateful to Ken Yoda, Yusuke Goto, and Yutaka Watanuki for discussions on the early draft of my manuscript, and to Yuuki Y. Watanabe for the advice on the initial data analysis. I thank Christopher R. Cooney for explaining the detailed method to prepare the phylogenetic tree and Heiner Kuhl for sharing the file of the avian phylogenetic tree to make the backbone tree. I also thank two anonymous reviewers and the associate editor for their helpful comments and advice to improve the manuscript. This study was financially supported by JSPS KAKENHI (JP16H06541, JP17H05017, and JP21H02557), and the Frontier Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Sciences, Tohoku University.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors. Evolution © 2022 The Society for the Study of Evolution.
PY - 2022/3
Y1 - 2022/3
N2 - Elucidating determinants of interspecies variation in brain size has been a long-standing challenge in cognitive and evolutionary ecology. As the brain is an energetically expensive organ, energetic tradeoffs among organs are considered to play a key role in brain size evolution. This study examined the tradeoff between the brain and locomotion in birds by testing the relationship between brain size, flight modes with different energetic costs (flapping and soaring), and migratory behavior, using published data on the whole-brain mass of 2242 species. According to comparative analyses considering phylogeny and body mass, soarers, who can gain kinetic energy from wind shear or thermals and consequently save flight costs, have larger brains than flappers among migratory birds. Meanwhile, the brain size difference was not consistent in residents, and the size variation appeared much larger than that in migrants. In addition, the brain size of migratory birds was smaller than that of resident birds among flappers, whereas this property was not significant in soarers. Although further research is needed to draw a definitive conclusion, these findings provide further support for the energetic tradeoff of the brain with flight and migratory movements in birds and advance the idea that a locomotion mode with lower energetic cost could be a driver of encephalization during the evolution of the brain.
AB - Elucidating determinants of interspecies variation in brain size has been a long-standing challenge in cognitive and evolutionary ecology. As the brain is an energetically expensive organ, energetic tradeoffs among organs are considered to play a key role in brain size evolution. This study examined the tradeoff between the brain and locomotion in birds by testing the relationship between brain size, flight modes with different energetic costs (flapping and soaring), and migratory behavior, using published data on the whole-brain mass of 2242 species. According to comparative analyses considering phylogeny and body mass, soarers, who can gain kinetic energy from wind shear or thermals and consequently save flight costs, have larger brains than flappers among migratory birds. Meanwhile, the brain size difference was not consistent in residents, and the size variation appeared much larger than that in migrants. In addition, the brain size of migratory birds was smaller than that of resident birds among flappers, whereas this property was not significant in soarers. Although further research is needed to draw a definitive conclusion, these findings provide further support for the energetic tradeoff of the brain with flight and migratory movements in birds and advance the idea that a locomotion mode with lower energetic cost could be a driver of encephalization during the evolution of the brain.
KW - avian brain
KW - brain evolution
KW - energetic tradeoff
KW - locomotion mode
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U2 - 10.1111/evo.14425
DO - 10.1111/evo.14425
M3 - Article
C2 - 34989401
AN - SCOPUS:85123505581
SN - 0014-3820
VL - 76
SP - 649
EP - 657
JO - Evolution; international journal of organic evolution
JF - Evolution; international journal of organic evolution
IS - 3
ER -