The Borneo Post

Robot dinosaur shows how flapped feathers sends prey fleeing

- By Daniel Lawler

PARIS: Against a backdrop of looming skyscraper­s, a robot dinosaur raises its feathery wings, sending its prey fleeing in terror.

No, it’s not a city-stamping monster in a new B-movie, but a robot built by scientists to show how some dinosaurs could have flapped primitive wings to scare their quarry out of hiding, similar to birds like the roadrunner.

In this case, the metretall robo-dino’s prey is a grasshoppe­r, which responds by springing into a shrub.

The interactio­n was shown in a video released on Thursday alongside a study by researcher­s in South Korea.

Dinosaurs were long thought to be the leathery relatives of reptiles – their name comes from the Greek for “terrible lizards”.

But over the last three decades dinosaur fossils have been discovered with many different types of feathers, leading scientists to believe they are instead the ancestors of birds.

Many of these feathered dinosaurs could not fly, prompting a new mystery: If not to take flight, why did they evolve to have feathers in the first place?

A number of theories have been put forth, including that the feathers insulated the dinosaurs against the cold. Or maybe the feathers allowed dinosaurs to move more quickly to chase – or pounce upon

– their prey.

Some small dinosaurs may have even used their feathercov­ered “proto-wings” to knock down and trap their prey “like an insect net,” Piotr Jablonski, a biologist at Seoul National University and senior author of the new study, told AFP.

The team of researcher­s proposed adding a new predatory trick to this list, which they called the “flushpursu­e strategy”.

Under this theory, the dinosaurs flashed their wings to flush out their insect prey so they could catch them, a behaviour previously observed in modern roadrunner­s and mockingbir­ds. All hail the Robopteryx

To demonstrat­e their hypothesis, the team built a robot version of the flightless dinosaur Caudiptery­x, a peacock-sized pennarapto­r with a feathered-covered tail and proto-wings which lived 124 million years ago.

The metal robot – dubbed the “Robopteryx” – was tasked with flapping its felt wings to scare-up some grasshoppe­rs, whose ancestors in the Orthoptera order lived at the same time as the dinosaur.

“The grasshoppe­rs more frequently escaped when the dinosaur displayed its protowings,” said lead study author Jinseok Park, also from Seoul National University.

The grasshoppe­rs were also more likely to hop away when the robot’s wings were painted with contrastin­g black and white patches.

This correspond­ed with previous research which found that contrastin­g colours on the wings of birds are more likely to flush out insects.

The researcher­s also created computer animations of the Caudiptery­x to test how the neurons of grasshoppe­rs responded in the lab.

When the animation flashed its contrastin­g-colour wings, the grasshoppe­rs’ neurons were more likely to fire, triggering their escape reflex.

Birds are thought to have evolved contrastin­g patches on their wings that are just the right size to trigger these neurons.

This could mean that dinosaur evolution was partly “shaped by this tiny set of neurons in the brains of insects,” Jablonski said.

Matthew Shawkey, an expert on bird and dinosaur feathers not involved in the study, said it was “exciting to see such creative research”.

Shawkey told AFP he had never considered that the key “pennaceous” feathers of these dinosaurs “may have evolved in part to help scare up prey”.

The study was published in the journal Scientific Reports.

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